Vince Ferrara’s 1-on-1 interview with Tom Luginbill talking Tennessee football, recruiting, the college football playoff and much more.

Vince Ferrara’s 1-on-1 interview with Tom Luginbill talking Tennessee football, recruiting, the college football playoff and much more.
Vince Ferrara’s 1-on-1 interview with Tom Luginbill talking Tennessee football, recruiting, the college football playoff and much more.
Tennessee (5-5) will try to surpass the .500 winning percentage mark for the first time this season on Sunday, as Wright State (1-7; 0-2 Horizon League) comes to Knoxville for a 2:02 p.m. ET matinee at Thompson-Boling Arena.
The contest marks the Lady Vols’ fifth of a six-game home stand and a stretch of nine out of 11 on The Summitt between Nov. 25 and Jan. 5. Coach Kellie Harper‘s squad enters having won three of its last four contests, taking down Chattanooga by a 69-39 count Tuesday evening on the UT campus.
Tennessee played that game without two starters and a key reserve, as senior forward Rickea Jackson remained out due to coach’s decision, graduate forward Jasmine Franklin was inactive for her second game while in concussion protocol and senior center Tamari Key missed the first game ever in her career for what was later announced as the discovery of blood clots in her lungs after additional testing on Tuesday. She has been ruled out for the remainder of the 2022-23 campaign.
Wright State arrives on Rocky Top as part of a two-game road swing. The Raiders were in Huntington, W.Va., on Friday night, where they suffered a 72-47 defeat at the hands of the Marshall Thundering Herd. WSU enters Sunday’s tilt with an 0-5 record in road games this season.
This will mark the first-ever meeting between these schools in women’s basketball.
Game Promotions
Broadcast Information
Lady Vol Trending Topics
What’s Next?
Home, Sweet Home
Looking Back At The Chattanooga Game
Collegiate First
Lockdown Defense
Defense Creates Offense
Balanced Attack
Money From The Stripe
Specialty Stats Bests
A Look At The Raiders
Wright State’s Last Game
UT/WSU Notes
-UT Athletics
Tennessee (5-5) will try to surpass the .500 winning percentage mark for the first time this season on Sunday, as Wright State (1-7; 0-2 Horizon League) comes to Knoxville for a 2:02 p.m. ET matinee at Thompson-Boling Arena.
The contest marks the Lady Vols’ fifth of a six-game home stand and a stretch of nine out of 11 on The Summitt between Nov. 25 and Jan. 5. Coach Kellie Harper‘s squad enters having won three of its last four contests, taking down Chattanooga by a 69-39 count Tuesday evening on the UT campus.
Tennessee played that game without two starters and a key reserve, as senior forward Rickea Jackson remained out due to coach’s decision, graduate forward Jasmine Franklin was inactive for her second game while in concussion protocol and senior center Tamari Key missed the first game ever in her career for what was later announced as the discovery of blood clots in her lungs after additional testing on Tuesday. She has been ruled out for the remainder of the 2022-23 campaign.
Wright State arrives on Rocky Top as part of a two-game road swing. The Raiders were in Huntington, W.Va., on Friday night, where they suffered a 72-47 defeat at the hands of the Marshall Thundering Herd. WSU enters Sunday’s tilt with an 0-5 record in road games this season.
This will mark the first-ever meeting between these schools in women’s basketball.
Game Promotions
Broadcast Information
Lady Vol Trending Topics
What’s Next?
Home, Sweet Home
Looking Back At The Chattanooga Game
Collegiate First
Lockdown Defense
Defense Creates Offense
Balanced Attack
Money From The Stripe
Specialty Stats Bests
A Look At The Raiders
Wright State’s Last Game
UT/WSU Notes
-UT Athletics
DALLAS – After becoming the first Biletnikoff Award winner in program history, Tennessee football wide receiver Jalin Hyatt reeled in Football Writers Association of America First Team All-America honors Friday afternoon.
The recognition marks Hyatt’s second major All-America honor after being named a Walter Camp First Team All-American on Thursday, shortly after his name was called for the Biletnikoff. He is the first Vol to earn first-team All-America accolades from the FWAA since defensive back Eric Berry in 2009 and UT’s first player to earn first-team honors from multiple organizations since Derek Barnett in 2016.
ADVERTISINGThe junior from Irmo, South Carolina, dazzled all year long, finishing the year with five games where he recorded over 100 yards receiving. Similarly, he logged five games with multiple touchdown receptions and had a four-game stretch from LSU to Kentucky where he racked up 11 touchdown scores, a mark that would have ranked tied for fourth in program history had he played no games beyond those four.
For the season, Hyatt amassed 67 catches for 1,267 yards and 15 touchdowns. He set a single-game record for touchdown receptions with five against then-No. 3 Alabama and the 15 total receiving scores are a single-season program record. His game against the Crimson Tide also saw the speedy receiver rack up 207 yards, the sixth-most in a game in school history, on just six catches, an average of 34.5 yards per reception.
At the close of the regular season, Hyatt ranks second in school history in single-season yards, just 31 behind Robert Meachem’s 1,298-mark set in 2006. He earned the triple crown in the SEC by leading the league in all three major categories (receptions, yards, touchdowns), and demonstrated his explosive nature time and time again, leading the country in catches of 30 or more yards (15), 40 or more yards (11), 50 or more yards (7) and 60 or more yards (5).
The full FWAA All-America Teams can be found below, as well as a list of all postseason honors earned by Vols this year.
FIRST TEAM OFFENSE
QB Caleb Williams, USC
RB Blake Corum, Michigan
RB Bijan Robinson, Texas
WR Marvin Harrison Jr., Ohio State
WR Jalin Hyatt, Tennessee
TE Brock Bowers, Georgia
OL Steve Avila, TCU
OL Paris Johnson Jr., Ohio State
OL John Michael Schmitz, Minnesota
OL Peter Skoronski, Northwestern
C Olusegun Oluwatimi, Michigan
FIRST TEAM DEFENSE
DL Jalen Carter, Georgia
DL Calijah Kancey, Pitt
DL Tuli Tuipulotu, USC
DL Tyree Wilson, Texas Tech
LB Will Anderson Jr., Alabama
LB Jack Campbell, Iowa
LB Ivan Pace Jr., Cincinnati
DB Emmanuel Forbes, Mississippi State
DB Clark Phillips III, Utah
DB Chris Smith, Georgia
DB Devon Witherspoon, Illinois
FIRST TEAM SPECIALISTS
K Christopher Dunn, N.C. State
P Tory Taylor, Iowa
KR Lideatrick Griffin, Mississippi State
PR Derius Davis, TCU
AP Zach Charbonnet, UCLA
SECOND TEAM OFFENSE:
QB Max Duggan, TCU
RB Israel Abanikanda, Pitt
RB Mohamed Ibrahim, Minnesota
WR Josh Downs, North Carolina
WR Rashee Rice, SMU
TE Michael Mayer, Notre Dame
OL Joe Alt, Notre Dame
OL Nick Broeker, Ole Miss
OL O’Cyrus Torrence, Florida
OL Andrew Vorhees, USC
C Alex Forsyth, Oregon
SECOND TEAM DEFENSE:
DL Felix Anudike-Uzomah, Kansas State
DL Tyler Davis, Clemson
DL Isaiah Foskey, Notre Dame
DL Mike Morris, Michigan
LB Tommy Eichenberg, Ohio State
LB Jason Henderson, Old Dominion
LB Drew Sanders, Arkansas
DB Erick Hallett II, Pitt
DB Tre’Vius Hodges-Tomlinson, TCU
DB Joey Porter Jr., Penn State
DB John Torchio, Wisconsin
SECOND TEAM SPECIALISTS:
K Joshua Karty, Stanford
P Bryce Baringer, Michigan State
KR Milan Tucker, App State
PR Kool-Aid McKinstry, Alabama
AP Chase Brown, Illinois
HC Josh Heupel
SEC Coach of the Year – AP
OC Alex Golesh
Frank Broyles Award Finalist
QB Hendon Hooker
Walter Camp Player of the Year Award Finalist
Maxwell Award Finalist
Manning Award Finalist
Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award Finalist
All-America Second Team – CBSSports.com/247Sports
SEC Offensive Player of the Year – AP, Coaches, USA Today
All-SEC First Team – AP, Coaches, USA Today
WR Jalin Hyatt
Biletnikoff Award Winner
All-America First Team – Walter Camp, FWAA, The Athletic, CBSSports.com/247Sports
All-SEC First Team – AP, Coaches, USA Today
TE Jacob Warren
2022 SEC Community Service Team
OL Darnell Wright
All-SEC First Team – AP, Coaches, USA Today
DE Byron Young
All-SEC First Team – Coaches
All-SEC Second Team – AP
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee wide receiver Jalin Hyatt continued to rack up the honors on Thursday night, garnering Walter Camp First Team All-America recognition as announced on The Home Depot College Football Awards Show on ESPN.
Hyatt was also named the winner of the Biletnikoff Award during the show, which annually recognizes college football’s most outstanding FBS receiver. Any player, regardless of position (wide receiver, tight end, slot back and running back) who catches a pass is eligible for the award.
ADVERTISINGThe junior wideout had a breakout season for the Volunteers, achieving the SEC receiving triple crown—leading the league in receptions (67), receiving yards (1,267) and receiving touchdowns (15). His 15 scores also lead the FBS, while his 1,267 yards rank fourth nationally and are 31 shy of tying the program record set by Robert Meachem in 2006. Hyatt was recently named a first-team All-SEC selection by the league’s coaches and the Associated Press, as well.
Hyatt is the first Tennessee player to earn first-team All-America honors at any position since defensive end Derek Barnett in 2016, who earned recognition from Walter Camp and the Associated Press that year. The Irmo, South Carolina, native is UT’s sixth first-team All-America wide receiver, joining the likes of Robert Meachem (2006), Carl Pickens (1991), Tim McGee (1985), Willie Gault (1982) and Larry Seivers (1975, 76).
Hyatt’s impressive season included five games with over 100 yards receiving – including four of his last seven games – and five games with multiple touchdown receptions. He became the first player in program history to ever record multiple touchdown catches in four straight games in a single season, doing so in a stretch of wins against LSU, Alabama, UT Martin and Kentucky. Hyatt’s legendary performance in the Vol’s victory over No. 3 Alabama will forever be etched in Tennessee football lore as he finished with six catches for 207 yards while setting a program record and tying the SEC record with five touchdown receptions.
This year marks the 133rd edition of the Walter Camp All-America team, the nation’s oldest college football All-America team. The teams were selected by the 131 FBS head coaches and sports information directors.
The full 2022 Walter Camp All-America teams can be found HERE and a complete list of Tennessee’s postseason honors can be seen below.
HC Josh Heupel
SEC Coach of the Year – AP
OC Alex Golesh
Frank Broyles Award Finalist
QB Hendon Hooker
Walter Camp Player of the Year Award Finalist
Maxwell Award Finalist
Manning Award Finalist
Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award Finalist
SEC Offensive Player of the Year – AP
All-SEC First Team – AP, Coaches
WR Jalin Hyatt
Biletnikoff Award Winner
All-America First Team – Walter Camp
All-SEC First Team – AP, Coaches
TE Jacob Warren
2022 SEC Community Service Team
OL Darnell Wright
All-SEC First Team – AP, Coaches
DE Byron Young
All-SEC First Team – Coaches
All-SEC Second Team – AP
-UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee wide receiver Jalin Hyatt continued to rack up the honors on Thursday night, garnering Walter Camp First Team All-America recognition as announced on The Home Depot College Football Awards Show on ESPN.
Hyatt was also named the winner of the Biletnikoff Award during the show, which annually recognizes college football’s most outstanding FBS receiver. Any player, regardless of position (wide receiver, tight end, slot back and running back) who catches a pass is eligible for the award.
ADVERTISINGThe junior wideout had a breakout season for the Volunteers, achieving the SEC receiving triple crown—leading the league in receptions (67), receiving yards (1,267) and receiving touchdowns (15). His 15 scores also lead the FBS, while his 1,267 yards rank fourth nationally and are 31 shy of tying the program record set by Robert Meachem in 2006. Hyatt was recently named a first-team All-SEC selection by the league’s coaches and the Associated Press, as well.
Hyatt is the first Tennessee player to earn first-team All-America honors at any position since defensive end Derek Barnett in 2016, who earned recognition from Walter Camp and the Associated Press that year. The Irmo, South Carolina, native is UT’s sixth first-team All-America wide receiver, joining the likes of Robert Meachem (2006), Carl Pickens (1991), Tim McGee (1985), Willie Gault (1982) and Larry Seivers (1975, 76).
Hyatt’s impressive season included five games with over 100 yards receiving – including four of his last seven games – and five games with multiple touchdown receptions. He became the first player in program history to ever record multiple touchdown catches in four straight games in a single season, doing so in a stretch of wins against LSU, Alabama, UT Martin and Kentucky. Hyatt’s legendary performance in the Vol’s victory over No. 3 Alabama will forever be etched in Tennessee football lore as he finished with six catches for 207 yards while setting a program record and tying the SEC record with five touchdown receptions.
This year marks the 133rd edition of the Walter Camp All-America team, the nation’s oldest college football All-America team. The teams were selected by the 131 FBS head coaches and sports information directors.
The full 2022 Walter Camp All-America teams can be found HERE and a complete list of Tennessee’s postseason honors can be seen below.
HC Josh Heupel
SEC Coach of the Year – AP
OC Alex Golesh
Frank Broyles Award Finalist
QB Hendon Hooker
Walter Camp Player of the Year Award Finalist
Maxwell Award Finalist
Manning Award Finalist
Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award Finalist
SEC Offensive Player of the Year – AP
All-SEC First Team – AP, Coaches
WR Jalin Hyatt
Biletnikoff Award Winner
All-America First Team – Walter Camp
All-SEC First Team – AP, Coaches
TE Jacob Warren
2022 SEC Community Service Team
OL Darnell Wright
All-SEC First Team – AP, Coaches
DE Byron Young
All-SEC First Team – Coaches
All-SEC Second Team – AP
-UT Athletics
The seventh-ranked Tennessee men’s basketball team heads north this weekend to take on No. 13 Maryland on Sunday at the Basketball Hall of Fame Invitational in Brooklyn, New York.
Fans can catch Sunday’s game on FOX Sports 1, online at FOXsports.com or on any mobile device through the FOX Sports app. Jason Benetti (play-by-play) and Jim Jackson (analysis) will have the call.
ADVERTISINGFans can also listen live on their local Vol Network affiliate to hear Bob Kesling and Bert Bertelkamp describing the action.
Tennessee (8-1) won its seventh consecutive game on Wednesday, defeating Eastern Kentucky, 84-49. The Vols held the Colonels to just 22.1 percent shooting (15-for-68) on the evening, the second-lowest mark by an opponent during the Rick Barnes era and lowest since Nov. 6, 2018. Freshman forward Julian Phillips led the way for Tennessee with his first career double-double, tallying 16 points and 10 rebounds.
Sunday marks the Vols’ fourth trip to New York City under Barnes and third appearance at the Brooklyn Nets’ Barclays Center. It also marks Tennessee’s fifth all-time meeting with Maryland—fourth at a neutral site—and first since 1984.
Following Sunday’s game in Brooklyn, Tennessee is back on the road—heading west to take on Arizona in Tucson on Saturday, Dec. 17. Tip-off is set for 10:30 p.m. ET on ESPN2.
THE SERIES
• Tennessee is designated as the visiting team Sunday.
• This is Tennessee’s fourth trip to New York City under head coach Rick Barnes and third appearance at the Barclays Center (2015 Barclays Center Classic, 2018 NIT Season Tip-Off).
• Tennessee is 2-2 all-time against Maryland and 24-37 all-time vs. current members of the Big Ten.
• The last time Tennessee and Maryland met, Len Bias led the Terps to victory. See “Last Meeting” note below.
• Vols sophomore guard Zakai Zeigler hails from nearby Long Island, New York, just east of Barclays Center. Freshman forward Tobe Awaka grew up in Hyde Park and graduated from Cardinal Hayes High School.
• This marks the fourth time in the last five seasons that Tennessee has been invited to participate in a neutral-site event administered by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
SCOUTING REPORT
• All-SEC senior Santiago Vescovi has missed UT’s last two games with a left (shooting) shoulder sprain. Vescovi remains day-to-day.
• After shooting .440 from the field in UT’s first four games, Olivier Nkamhoua has shot .667 over the last five outings.
• The Volunteers own the best adjusted defensive efficiency in the country, allowing only 82.6 points per 100 possessions.
• Seven times this season, the Vols have held their opponents to 50 points or less. Tennessee has now done that 27 times during the Barnes era (2015-present).
• Zakai Zeigler (10th) and Santiago Vescovi (17th) both rank among the Division I top 20 in steals per game.
• Tennessee has yet to trail at the break this season and is outscoring its opponents 34.1 ppg to 23.0 ppg (+11.1 ppg) in first-half action.
BIG APPLE BITES
• Tennessee owns an all-time record of 9-19 in the state of New York. In New York City, the Vols are 7-18.
• The Vols own a 1-3 all-time record at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center, with previous appearances in 2015 (0-2) and 2018 (1-1).
• Tennessee has produced five basketball All-Americans from New York: Ed Wiener (Brooklyn), Ernie Grunfeld (Forest Hills), Bernard King (Brooklyn), Howard Wood (East Hampton) and current 76ers star Tobias Harris (Dix Hills).
• Tennessee’s all-time leading scorer and New York Knicks great Allan Houston is planning to attend Sunday’s game.
• Several current Brooklyn Nets stars suffered losses vs. Tennessee during their college careers: Kevin Durant (2006), Markieff Morris (2010), Joe Harris (2013), Ben Simmons (2016) and Nic Claxton (2018 and 2019).
• Durant played for Rick Barnes at Texas in 2006-07 and was the national player of the year.
ABOUT MARYLAND
• After winning eight straight games to start the season, Maryland (8-1) dropped its first contest of the year Tuesday night at Wisconsin, 64-59. Prior to falling to Wisconsin and a five-point win over No. 16 Illinois, the Terps had won each of their first seven games by at least 15 points.
• Maryland has already recorded two Quad 1 wins this season, taking down Miami and Illinois.
• The Terrapins are ranked No. 13 in this week’s AP Poll—their highest AP ranking since the final poll of the 2019-20 season. Maryland also debuted at No. 6 in the NCAA’s NET rankings prior to Tuesday’s loss.
• Maryland is in its first season of the Kevin Willard era. Willard stepped into the Maryland job following 12 seasons as the head coach at Seton Hall, where he posted a 225-161 (.583) record and led the Pirates to the 2016 Big East title and five NCAA Tournament appearances.
• Willard is the first head coach in Maryland’s program history to lead the team to an AP Top 25 ranking during his first season and also the first head coach in program history to lead the Terps to an 8-0 start.
• In his first season at Maryland after transferring from Charlotte, graduate guard Jahmir Young is the Terps’ leading scorer with a 15.3 ppg average. Young was a two-time first-team All-Conference USA selection at Charlotte and the league’s freshman of the year in 2020. Young has scored in double figures during all but one game this season and had a season-high 24 points during Maryland’s win over No. 16 Illinois.
• Maryland has four players averaging at least 12.0 points per game—Young (15.3), senior forward Donta Scott (14.7), senior guard Hakim Hart (12.8) and sophomore forward Julian Reese (12.3).
LAST MEETING WITH MARYLAND
• Maryland handed Tennessee a lopsided 72-49 loss at the Great Alaska Shootout in Anchorage on Nov. 25, 1984, capping a 1-2 showing at the event for the Vols under head coach Don DeVoe.
• Two-time ACC Player of the Year Len Bias (later the No. 2 overall pick in the 1986 NBA Draft) led the Terps with 25 points and 10 rebounds, while Keith Gatlin scored 14 and current ESPN hoops analyst Adrian Branch added 13 points.
• Tennessee great Tony White, then just a sophomore, logged 12 points and was the only Vol to score in double figures. White later went on to finish his career as UT’s second-leading scorer of all-time, with 2,219 points.
• Maryland shot .519 from the field (27-52), while the Vols shot .386 (22-57).
• Three Tennessee turnovers late in the first half enabled the Terps to score the last eight points of the half and take a 28-15 lead into the break.
VFLs MADE THEIR NAME IN NYC
• Three former Vols who advanced to play in the NBA made a big splash in New York City.
• Bernard King (native of Brooklyn), Ernie Grunfeld (native of Forest Hills) and Allan Houston each enjoyed years of success for the New York Knicks in roles as players and in the front office.
• Bernard King — Ranks second in Knicks franchise history with a 26.5 career scoring average … Led the Knicks in scoring three times, including a club record 32.9 points per game in 1984-85 … Owns the franchise record for single-season field-goal percentage (57.2 in 1983-84) … On Christmas Day 1984, he scored a Knicks franchise record 60 points against New Jersey … Holds the franchise record for points in a playoff game (46 in back-to-back games against Detroit in 1984) … Two-time All-NBA Team selection (1984 and 1985) while playing for the Knicks … Was one of seven all-time Knicks greats honored on Legends Awards Night at Madison Square Garden on May 27, 2009.
• Ernie Grunfeld — Spent 17 seasons with the Knicks as a player (1983-86), coach (1989-90) and broadcaster before eventually settling in as general manager (1991-99), where he built teams that appeared in the NBA Finals in 1995 and 1999 … later served as president and GM of the Washington Wizards.
• Allan Houston — Spent nine of his 12 professional seasons with the Knicks, finishing his career as one of the NBA’s best 3-point shooters … Fourth all-time leading scorer in Knicks history with 11,165 career points and is second with 921 3-pointers … Team captain for six seasons (1999-2005) … His running one-hander with 0.8 seconds to play beat top-seeded Miami in game five of the first round of the playoffs and set the Knicks on the path to the 1999 NBA Finals … In 2001, he set a club record with his 90.9 free throw percentage … Now works as the Knicks’ Vice President for Player Leadership & Development.
BACK IN THE DAY, BARNES WON BIG EAST TITLE IN THE BIG APPLE
• In his sixth and final season as the head coach at Providence, Rick Barnes led the Friars to the 1994 Big East Tournament championship at Madison Square Garden.
• After dispatching No. 5 seed Villanova and top-seeded and second-ranked UConn, fourth-seeded Providence defeated Georgetown, 74–64, in the title game on March 13.
• Michael Smith won the Dave Gavitt Trophy as tournament MVP, while fellow Friars Rob Phelps and Dickey Simpkins (who went on to win three NBA championships with the Chicago Bulls) also made the six-man All-Tournament Team.
• It was Providence’s first-ever Big East Tournament title. The Friars’ only other BET title came in 2014.
VOLS SEEKING 23rd RANKED WIN UNDER BARNES
• Under Rick Barnes, the Vols have logged 22 victories over AP ranked opponents, including 10 wins over top-10 teams.
FRESHMAN PHILLIPS LEADING SEC IN FREE-THROW ATTEMPTS
• Last season, NBA Draft pick Kennedy Chandler led the Vols in free-throw attempts with 99 (in 34 games).
• This season, UT’s new five-star freshman, Julian Phillips, leads the SEC and ranks 19th nationally with 61 attempts—through only nine games!
• Phillips attempts 6.8 free throws per game and is making them at a .787 clip.
• Using his current average of 5.3 FT makes per game, Phillips is on pace to make 165 free throws by the end of the regular season.
• After each of the last two seasons, Tennessee’s leader in free-throw attempts was selected in the NBA Draft: Chandler in 2022 and Keon Johnson in 2021.
VOLS LEAD NATION IN ASSIST RATE
• Tennessee has assisted on 71.6 percent of its made baskets thus far. That assist rate is tops among all Division I teams.
• Zakai Zeigler and Santiago Vescovi lead the way with 33 (3.7 apg) and 24 (3.4 apg) assists, respectively.
POLINSKY FAMILIAR WITH NETS, BARCLAYS CENTER
• Tennessee assistant coach Gregg Polinsky served in various scouting roles with the NBA’s Brooklyn Nets for 19 years—including tenures as director of college scouting (2004-08) and director of player personnel (2008-18). He first joined the organization in 1999.
-UT Athletics
The seventh-ranked Tennessee men’s basketball team heads north this weekend to take on No. 13 Maryland on Sunday at the Basketball Hall of Fame Invitational in Brooklyn, New York.
Fans can catch Sunday’s game on FOX Sports 1, online at FOXsports.com or on any mobile device through the FOX Sports app. Jason Benetti (play-by-play) and Jim Jackson (analysis) will have the call.
ADVERTISINGFans can also listen live on their local Vol Network affiliate to hear Bob Kesling and Bert Bertelkamp describing the action.
Tennessee (8-1) won its seventh consecutive game on Wednesday, defeating Eastern Kentucky, 84-49. The Vols held the Colonels to just 22.1 percent shooting (15-for-68) on the evening, the second-lowest mark by an opponent during the Rick Barnes era and lowest since Nov. 6, 2018. Freshman forward Julian Phillips led the way for Tennessee with his first career double-double, tallying 16 points and 10 rebounds.
Sunday marks the Vols’ fourth trip to New York City under Barnes and third appearance at the Brooklyn Nets’ Barclays Center. It also marks Tennessee’s fifth all-time meeting with Maryland—fourth at a neutral site—and first since 1984.
Following Sunday’s game in Brooklyn, Tennessee is back on the road—heading west to take on Arizona in Tucson on Saturday, Dec. 17. Tip-off is set for 10:30 p.m. ET on ESPN2.
THE SERIES
• Tennessee is designated as the visiting team Sunday.
• This is Tennessee’s fourth trip to New York City under head coach Rick Barnes and third appearance at the Barclays Center (2015 Barclays Center Classic, 2018 NIT Season Tip-Off).
• Tennessee is 2-2 all-time against Maryland and 24-37 all-time vs. current members of the Big Ten.
• The last time Tennessee and Maryland met, Len Bias led the Terps to victory. See “Last Meeting” note below.
• Vols sophomore guard Zakai Zeigler hails from nearby Long Island, New York, just east of Barclays Center. Freshman forward Tobe Awaka grew up in Hyde Park and graduated from Cardinal Hayes High School.
• This marks the fourth time in the last five seasons that Tennessee has been invited to participate in a neutral-site event administered by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
SCOUTING REPORT
• All-SEC senior Santiago Vescovi has missed UT’s last two games with a left (shooting) shoulder sprain. Vescovi remains day-to-day.
• After shooting .440 from the field in UT’s first four games, Olivier Nkamhoua has shot .667 over the last five outings.
• The Volunteers own the best adjusted defensive efficiency in the country, allowing only 82.6 points per 100 possessions.
• Seven times this season, the Vols have held their opponents to 50 points or less. Tennessee has now done that 27 times during the Barnes era (2015-present).
• Zakai Zeigler (10th) and Santiago Vescovi (17th) both rank among the Division I top 20 in steals per game.
• Tennessee has yet to trail at the break this season and is outscoring its opponents 34.1 ppg to 23.0 ppg (+11.1 ppg) in first-half action.
BIG APPLE BITES
• Tennessee owns an all-time record of 9-19 in the state of New York. In New York City, the Vols are 7-18.
• The Vols own a 1-3 all-time record at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center, with previous appearances in 2015 (0-2) and 2018 (1-1).
• Tennessee has produced five basketball All-Americans from New York: Ed Wiener (Brooklyn), Ernie Grunfeld (Forest Hills), Bernard King (Brooklyn), Howard Wood (East Hampton) and current 76ers star Tobias Harris (Dix Hills).
• Tennessee’s all-time leading scorer and New York Knicks great Allan Houston is planning to attend Sunday’s game.
• Several current Brooklyn Nets stars suffered losses vs. Tennessee during their college careers: Kevin Durant (2006), Markieff Morris (2010), Joe Harris (2013), Ben Simmons (2016) and Nic Claxton (2018 and 2019).
• Durant played for Rick Barnes at Texas in 2006-07 and was the national player of the year.
ABOUT MARYLAND
• After winning eight straight games to start the season, Maryland (8-1) dropped its first contest of the year Tuesday night at Wisconsin, 64-59. Prior to falling to Wisconsin and a five-point win over No. 16 Illinois, the Terps had won each of their first seven games by at least 15 points.
• Maryland has already recorded two Quad 1 wins this season, taking down Miami and Illinois.
• The Terrapins are ranked No. 13 in this week’s AP Poll—their highest AP ranking since the final poll of the 2019-20 season. Maryland also debuted at No. 6 in the NCAA’s NET rankings prior to Tuesday’s loss.
• Maryland is in its first season of the Kevin Willard era. Willard stepped into the Maryland job following 12 seasons as the head coach at Seton Hall, where he posted a 225-161 (.583) record and led the Pirates to the 2016 Big East title and five NCAA Tournament appearances.
• Willard is the first head coach in Maryland’s program history to lead the team to an AP Top 25 ranking during his first season and also the first head coach in program history to lead the Terps to an 8-0 start.
• In his first season at Maryland after transferring from Charlotte, graduate guard Jahmir Young is the Terps’ leading scorer with a 15.3 ppg average. Young was a two-time first-team All-Conference USA selection at Charlotte and the league’s freshman of the year in 2020. Young has scored in double figures during all but one game this season and had a season-high 24 points during Maryland’s win over No. 16 Illinois.
• Maryland has four players averaging at least 12.0 points per game—Young (15.3), senior forward Donta Scott (14.7), senior guard Hakim Hart (12.8) and sophomore forward Julian Reese (12.3).
LAST MEETING WITH MARYLAND
• Maryland handed Tennessee a lopsided 72-49 loss at the Great Alaska Shootout in Anchorage on Nov. 25, 1984, capping a 1-2 showing at the event for the Vols under head coach Don DeVoe.
• Two-time ACC Player of the Year Len Bias (later the No. 2 overall pick in the 1986 NBA Draft) led the Terps with 25 points and 10 rebounds, while Keith Gatlin scored 14 and current ESPN hoops analyst Adrian Branch added 13 points.
• Tennessee great Tony White, then just a sophomore, logged 12 points and was the only Vol to score in double figures. White later went on to finish his career as UT’s second-leading scorer of all-time, with 2,219 points.
• Maryland shot .519 from the field (27-52), while the Vols shot .386 (22-57).
• Three Tennessee turnovers late in the first half enabled the Terps to score the last eight points of the half and take a 28-15 lead into the break.
VFLs MADE THEIR NAME IN NYC
• Three former Vols who advanced to play in the NBA made a big splash in New York City.
• Bernard King (native of Brooklyn), Ernie Grunfeld (native of Forest Hills) and Allan Houston each enjoyed years of success for the New York Knicks in roles as players and in the front office.
• Bernard King — Ranks second in Knicks franchise history with a 26.5 career scoring average … Led the Knicks in scoring three times, including a club record 32.9 points per game in 1984-85 … Owns the franchise record for single-season field-goal percentage (57.2 in 1983-84) … On Christmas Day 1984, he scored a Knicks franchise record 60 points against New Jersey … Holds the franchise record for points in a playoff game (46 in back-to-back games against Detroit in 1984) … Two-time All-NBA Team selection (1984 and 1985) while playing for the Knicks … Was one of seven all-time Knicks greats honored on Legends Awards Night at Madison Square Garden on May 27, 2009.
• Ernie Grunfeld — Spent 17 seasons with the Knicks as a player (1983-86), coach (1989-90) and broadcaster before eventually settling in as general manager (1991-99), where he built teams that appeared in the NBA Finals in 1995 and 1999 … later served as president and GM of the Washington Wizards.
• Allan Houston — Spent nine of his 12 professional seasons with the Knicks, finishing his career as one of the NBA’s best 3-point shooters … Fourth all-time leading scorer in Knicks history with 11,165 career points and is second with 921 3-pointers … Team captain for six seasons (1999-2005) … His running one-hander with 0.8 seconds to play beat top-seeded Miami in game five of the first round of the playoffs and set the Knicks on the path to the 1999 NBA Finals … In 2001, he set a club record with his 90.9 free throw percentage … Now works as the Knicks’ Vice President for Player Leadership & Development.
BACK IN THE DAY, BARNES WON BIG EAST TITLE IN THE BIG APPLE
• In his sixth and final season as the head coach at Providence, Rick Barnes led the Friars to the 1994 Big East Tournament championship at Madison Square Garden.
• After dispatching No. 5 seed Villanova and top-seeded and second-ranked UConn, fourth-seeded Providence defeated Georgetown, 74–64, in the title game on March 13.
• Michael Smith won the Dave Gavitt Trophy as tournament MVP, while fellow Friars Rob Phelps and Dickey Simpkins (who went on to win three NBA championships with the Chicago Bulls) also made the six-man All-Tournament Team.
• It was Providence’s first-ever Big East Tournament title. The Friars’ only other BET title came in 2014.
VOLS SEEKING 23rd RANKED WIN UNDER BARNES
• Under Rick Barnes, the Vols have logged 22 victories over AP ranked opponents, including 10 wins over top-10 teams.
FRESHMAN PHILLIPS LEADING SEC IN FREE-THROW ATTEMPTS
• Last season, NBA Draft pick Kennedy Chandler led the Vols in free-throw attempts with 99 (in 34 games).
• This season, UT’s new five-star freshman, Julian Phillips, leads the SEC and ranks 19th nationally with 61 attempts—through only nine games!
• Phillips attempts 6.8 free throws per game and is making them at a .787 clip.
• Using his current average of 5.3 FT makes per game, Phillips is on pace to make 165 free throws by the end of the regular season.
• After each of the last two seasons, Tennessee’s leader in free-throw attempts was selected in the NBA Draft: Chandler in 2022 and Keon Johnson in 2021.
VOLS LEAD NATION IN ASSIST RATE
• Tennessee has assisted on 71.6 percent of its made baskets thus far. That assist rate is tops among all Division I teams.
• Zakai Zeigler and Santiago Vescovi lead the way with 33 (3.7 apg) and 24 (3.4 apg) assists, respectively.
POLINSKY FAMILIAR WITH NETS, BARCLAYS CENTER
• Tennessee assistant coach Gregg Polinsky served in various scouting roles with the NBA’s Brooklyn Nets for 19 years—including tenures as director of college scouting (2004-08) and director of player personnel (2008-18). He first joined the organization in 1999.
-UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee has its first Biletnikoff Award winner. The nation’s most explosive playmaker Jalin Hyatt captured the award, which goes to college football’s most outstanding receiver regardless of position, on Thursday night as part of the virtual ESPN College Football Awards.
Hyatt beat out two other finalists in Iowa State’s Xavier Hutchinson and Ohio State’s Marvin Harrison Jr. He was chosen in a vote by the Biletnikoff Award national selection committee made up of writers, broadcasters, eminent receivers and past award winners. The Biletnikoff Award, named in honor of Hall of Fame receiver Fred Biletnikoff, has been presented annually by the Tallahassee Quarterback Club Foundation, Inc., (TQCF) since 1994.
ADVERTISINGHyatt is the sixth winner of the award from the SEC, and four out of the last five years have seen an SEC player take home the trophy. Tennessee joins Alabama and LSU as the only three SEC programs to produce a Biletnikoff Award winner.
Hyatt, a junior from Irmo, South Carolina, produced arguably the greatest regular season by a wide receiver in Tennessee history. He shattered the school record for receiving touchdowns with 15, a mark that also tied for the FBS lead and was tops among all Power Five players. The first-team All-SEC selection by the Associated Press and league coaches ranked fourth nationally in receiving yards with 1,267, which is 31 yards shy of tying the program record set by Robert Meachem in 2006.
Hyatt took home the SEC receiving triple crown—leading the league in receptions (67), receiving yards and receiving touchdowns. His explosive prowess was on display all season as he led the nation in 30+ yard catches (15), 40+ yard catches (11), 50+ yard catches (7) and 60+ yard catches (5).
Hyatt delivered one of the greatest wide receiver performances in SEC history in a 52-49 win over Alabama as he caught six passes for 207 yards and a school-record and SEC-record-tying five touchdown receptions. He became the first FBS player with five or more receiving touchdowns vs. an AP top five team since NC State’s Terry Holt did so vs. No. 3 Florida State on Nov. 8, 1997.
Hyatt will be formally presented with the trophy at the 29th annual Biletnikoff Award celebration in Tallahassee in the spring.
All-Time Biletnikoff Award Winners
1994 – Bobby Engram, Penn State
1995 – Terry Glenn, Ohio State
1996 – Marcus Harrison, Wyoming
1997 – Randy Moss, Marshall
1998 – Troy Edwards, Louisiana Tech
1999 – Troy Walters, Stanford
2000 – Antonio Bryant, Pittsburgh
2001 – Josh Reed, LSU
2002 – Charles Rogers, Michigan State
2003 – Larry Fitzgerald, Pittsburgh
2004 – Braylon Edwards, Michigan
2005 – Mike Hass, Oregon State
2006 – Calvin Johnson, Georgia Tech
2007 – Michael Crabtree, Texas Tech
2008 – Michael Crabtree, Texas Tech
2009 – Golden Tate, Notre Dame
2010 – Justin Blackmon, Oklahoma State
2011 – Justin Blackmon, Oklahoma State
2012 – Maquise Lee, USC
2013 – Brandin Cooks, Oregon State
2014 – Amari Cooper, Alabama
2015 – Corey Coleman, Baylor
2016 – Dede Westbrook, Oklahoma
2017 – James Washington, Oklahoma State
2018 – Jerry Jeudy, Alabama
2019 – Ja’Marr Chase, LSU
2020 – DeVonta Smith, Alabama
2021 – Jordan Addison, Pittsburgh
2022 – Jalin Hyatt, Tennessee
-UT Athletics