Tennessee running back Jabari Small spoke to the media Tuesday ahead of Saturday’s final regular season game at Vanderbilt.

Tennessee running back Jabari Small spoke to the media Tuesday ahead of Saturday’s final regular season game at Vanderbilt.
Tennessee defensive end/outside linebacker Byron Young spoke to the media Tuesday ahead of Saturday’s final regular season game at Vanderbilt.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – With one game remaining in the regular season, the ninth-ranked Tennessee Volunteers recalibrated and regrouped Monday morning inside Anderson Training Center and are looking to finish off the 2022 season strong on the road Saturday night at Vanderbilt.
Tennessee is on the hunt for its 10th victory of the season, which would be the first 10-win regular season since 2003 and first 10-win season overall since 2007. This weekend’s test grows in stature with every week as Vanderbilt (5-6, 2-5 SEC) is riding a two-game win streak after defeating Kentucky on the road two weeks ago, 24-21, then downing Florida, 31-24, last Saturday at home. It will take focus and a fresh attitude following Saturday’s defeat for the Vols to finish the year the right way.
“You have to cut it clean and you have to flush it,” head coach Josh Heupel said at the podium Monday afternoon. “That shows in your energy in the building, it shows in your approach in the meeting room, it shows with the energy and competitiveness that you have out on the practice field. Looking back a week ago, I told the team today, too, I liked a lot of what we did during the course of the week. The mindset and approach at the end of the week is going to be important in this one too.”
Inside the building, the members of the team feel no carryover going into the week of prep. Aaron Beasley and Omari Thomas both conveyed the motivation for this team to continue to achieve and continue to perform at a high level, even through adversity.
“I feel like we’re going to get back to work, starting tomorrow with our Tuesday practice,” Beasley, a senior linebacker said. “I feel like we just go lean on each other. We have to be there for each other and go back to work. We have to hone in on the details and just go back to work.”
“We know that we still have the chance to play for a New Year’s Six bowl,” the junior defensive lineman Thomas said. “That’s a big thing for this program. I don’t really know when the last time was that we played for a New Year’s Six bowl.”
With much at stake and much still left to achieve, the Volunteers return to Haslam Field tomorrow morning as preparation for Vanderbilt continues. Kickoff on Saturday, Nov. 26, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. ET, 6:30 p.m. CT inside of FirstBank Stadium in Nashville on SEC Network.
A full transcript of Coach Heupel, Omari Thomas and Aaron Beasley can be found below.
Opening statement…
“Happy Thanksgiving week to everybody. I hope everybody has safe travels, enjoys some time with their family and gets a chance to watch some football at the end of the week. Just looking backwards, we’re obviously disappointed with the outcome. Everybody inside of our program was. You can still feel it a little bit from the guys today as we started, as they came into the building. We got a chance to watch the tape with them. It was an opportunity to learn and grow. I told the guys that we have to cut that one off and move forward as soon as we got out of the team meeting. We had an opportunity to get out on the grass with them a little bit, move them around, and we’ll see them later today. We’re looking forward to competing. This is a big game. It’s one of the games that’s circled by a big portion of our fanbase. It’s obviously an in-state game. It’s important that we go finish this off the right way. We still have a lot of things that we’re playing for. First and foremost, this is just our next opportunity to go play together, so we’re looking forward to that opportunity.”
On Jeremy Banks…
“We anticipate Jeremy being with us here this week. As far as what transpired and those types of things, at the end of the day he wasn’t available this Saturday.”
On if there was a certain common denominator that South Carolina’s offense took advantage of Saturday…
“We’re disappointed. The players are too. It’s a prideful group that’s played well at times. Obviously, this was not a good performance. It was more missed assignments. We didn’t tackle well. There were some things that we controlled. Obviously, they played well too. We’re disappointed in those things. We didn’t defeat blocks. That’s up front and that’s out on the perimeter. We didn’t make plays in space. Those are things that, at the end of the day, you have to do. We have to learn from it, grow from it and be better.”
On Hendon Hooker’s career at Tennessee…
“I hate it for him, with just how much he’s poured into it, the competitor that he is and how much he’s grown. The opportunity here is still on the backend of the season for him. He represents everything good in college football. He’s a young man who’s learned how to become a grown man, who does it the right way, who cares about his teammates, who’s grown outside of the game, who’s grown inside of the game and who’s put himself in a position to have a great future in the game, too. I just hate that we don’t get a chance to go compete with him again and that he doesn’t have that opportunity. For him and his future, he’ll make some decisions here during the course of this week and start moving on, as far as getting healthy. We’re going to do everything that we can to help him in that process.”
On if he has to game plan differently with Joe Milton III due to injuries on the depth chart…
“Gaston (Moore) and Navy (Shuler) are two guys that have been in our system for a while, Gaston in particular. With Joe, we have to go play and find a way to win this game. We’ll use him as needed in the run game, too. Joe has grown a bunch. You guys have seen the way that he’s played when he’s been given the opportunity. He has really good command of what we’re doing. We don’t change what we do. He’ll be ready to go in this one.”
On how much improved Milton is in the run game compared to last season…
“I think he’s a lot more comfortable in what we’re doing. In the run game and in just his decision-making process with his eyes and all of it, he’s a lot further ahead than where we saw him at the beginning of last season. The guys around him have changed too. I anticipate him playing at a really high level.”
On what he has seen from Vanderbilt after two consecutive SEC wins…
“They’re playing as a team. They’ve created turnovers, created plays on special teams. Defensively, they’ve done a nice job here the last couple of weeks of making you earn it. They play hard. They’re physical. You see that in all three phases of the game. From them, the quarterback run game is potentially a portion of what they’re going to do in this one. We have to do a really good job of handling that and defeating blocks. Numbers are a part of that. Then, you have to win on the outside, too. We have to do a better job than we did a week ago with big, strong, physical wideouts. Offensively, we have to be efficient and play ahead of the chains. You guys hear me talk about it. We need to start fast in this one too. Defensively over the last couple of weeks, we haven’t started as fast as we’re capable of. We need to start fast in this one.”
On what he saw in the film that could be cleaned up schematically…
“There’s probably a couple of things coach Banks would change, but you’re trying to balance everything too, you know what I mean? From your numbers count in the box to protecting your guys out on the outside. At the end of the day, there are some plays we’re capable of making that we didn’t make in some of the one-on-one situations. We just didn’t play well enough.”
On making sure there is no carryover from last week to this week…
“You have to cut it clean and you have to flush it. That shows in your energy in the building, it shows in your approach in the meeting room, it shows with the energy and competitiveness that you have out on the practice field. Looking back a week ago, I told the team today, too, I liked a lot of what we did during the course of the week. The mindset and approach at the end of the week is going to be important in this one too. Obviously, Thanksgiving creates something unique this week.”
On who will step up as a leader in Hendon Hooker’s place…
“Hendon is a strong leader, there is absolutely no doubt. He’ll be in the building here at the beginning part of the week too. I think that’s important that his teammates see him and feel him too, but we have a lot of strong leadership. It’s not just one guy from within our locker room. We have a bunch of prideful guys. That’s why we’ve continued to improve as a program over the two years since I’ve been here. This one should be and will be important to our guys. Go finish. There’s a lot that we’re playing for. In life and in this game, you have to finish strong. We’re obviously at the tail end of our regular season. It’s important to finish it the right way”
On the fanbase’s admiration of Hendon Hooker…
“It’s been a great journey with him, watching him through the journey. What he means to this program currently, but long term too. He has an unbelievable legacy that he’s built here, and he’s built it along with his teammates. I got a question a minute ago just about being able to finish. Man, this team is playing for a legacy too in how you finish things. Hendon playing at as high a level as anybody in college football, anybody I’ve ever been around and just the competitor that he is, everybody can see that. He’s been a huge part of setting some really solid cornerstone pieces to what this program is and is going to be in the future.”
On Brandon Turnage…
“Don’t have an update on Brandon, we’ll see here later this week.”
On Hendon Hooker receiving the recognition for his performance this season…
“For Hendon, he’s not going to have an opportunity to play the last regular season game, but the rest of the season, there’s no one playing at a higher level than he has. You can see that in the way we’ve played. The number’s he’s put up, he absolutely deserves the opportunity to be there (at the Heisman Trophy ceremony). Some of the quarterback awards, anticipate him having an opportunity to win those.”
On Joe Milton III’s psyche since Saturday night knowing he is in line to start…
“You continue to invest. The guys that put the most into it inevitably get it rewarded back to them. You don’t know when, you don’t know how, but he’ll be prepared in a great way for this one. (He’s) been really consistent in the preparation as the backup all season long. Yesterday, he’s in the building watching tape like he normally does. We’ll have a great plan for him and expect him to go play at a really high level and execute.”
On the difficulty to keep a backup quarterback with experience from transferring…
“We talked about it during the offseason when he chose to stay, and you guys were asking those same questions. It’s hard, it’s rare. I think it speaks to the culture in the building and the culture inside of the quarterback room (and) his understanding of how he can grow as a player. At the end of the day, the biggest competition you have is with yourself to continue to develop and become the player that you are capable of. He has approached it the right way. I think it is a great lesson for a lot of guys throughout college football.”
On his conversations with Hendon Hooker after the injury…
“In the locker room afterwards before he had a final determination, you love on him. Emotional for him too. More realization for him yesterday after he gets the results from everything medically. He comes back this morning and he has great energy. He has a huge smile on his face. You can see how he has gone through his journey and why he has been able to have success through all the ups and downs. He is so consistent, very positive and was able to flip forward. There is no doubt he will be successful on the back end of this too.”
On the team’s response since Saturday…
“This morning, you can still feel the sense of pain and opportunity lost as they came up the stairs in the position room. I thought as they exited the team room, and really when we got out on the field, there was good energy in what we were doing today. We will see them against later today, but anticipate our guys having a great week of preparation and practice. I really do.”
On Doneiko Slaughter…
“Doneiko, do not know anything at this point but will know more at the back end of the week.”
On if he is evaluating Joe Milton III for this week or potentially for next season…
“This week is all about this week. That’s it. Let’s go finish this off the right way. We have an opportunity to finish with 10 regular season wins, which has not been done here in a long time, and put us in the best bowl situation we can be in. This football team has come a long way. It’s grown, it’s competed. It’s all about this week.”
On what happened during the loss against South Carolina…
“Just going back and getting the chance to watch the film, we saw that we didn’t execute well. We didn’t really focus on the small details that we normally hone in on. We just really didn’t execute well as a defense.”
On if the team is aware of the bowl game opportunities still within reach…
“We’re aware. We know that we still have the chance to play for a New Year’s Six bowl. That’s a big thing for this program. I don’t really know when the last time was that we played for a New Year’s Six bowl, but I know that it’s still something that we’re looking forward to. We just have to go out here this week and handle business against Vandy, let the chips fall where they fall and hopefully we get to play in a New Year’s Six bowl.”
On if there was a shift in mentality during practices that led to the loss against South Carolina…
“Honestly, I feel that this past week we actually had a good practice. I feel like everybody was locked in for real. Everybody came in and was trying to get better as the week went on and was focused on the small details. Just different things we were seeing, we literally saw in practice, we just didn’t execute in the game. We saw it on film, it was just different things like that. It was just a bad day for us. As far as practice goes, I felt like we were locked in and had good practices the whole week. We we’re ready to go out there and play, honestly. It just didn’t click for us that game.”
On fixing the defense’s mentality going into the Vanderbilt game…
“We just got to go back to the drawing board. This really just shows how much we actually love the game, how much we actually love our job. Go out there, change the script again, try to end the season on a good note.”
On if there is concern on motivation for Vanderbilt game…
“In my opinion, no. I feel like we’re going to get back to work, starting tomorrow with our Tuesday practice. I feel like we just go lean on each other. We got to be there for each other and go back to work. We got to hone in on the details and just go back to work.”
On who is going to step up in a leadership role…
“I feel like we just got to come together as a team. We got to really love on each other, really encourage each other, not really worry about what happened last week. Just come together, because as the end of the day we’re all we got in that family over there. We just got to lean on each other.”
-UT Athletics
2022 Broyles Award Semifinalists
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – Alex Golesh, the conductor of Tennessee’s high-powered offense, was named one of 15 semifinalists for the 2022 Broyles Award, as announced by the Frank & Barbara Broyles Foundation on Monday.
The Volunteers’ second-year offensive coordinator and tight ends coach was selected as a semifinalist for the prestigious honor by a selection committee of distinguished former head coaches, broadcasters and members representing the Football Writers Association of America (FWAA). Golesh will seek to become just the second Tennessee assistant to win the award for the nation’s top assistant coach, joining offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach David Cutcliffe (1998).
In his second season as offensive coordinator, UT’s attack has been near unstoppable through 11 games, ranking first in the FBS in scoring (46.5 ppg) and total offense (540.4 ypg). The Vols also rank second in the nation in passing offense (348.8), fifth in completion percentage (69.6) and sixth in redzone offense (93.3%). They lead the SEC in numerous categories, including scoring offense, total offense, passing offense, completion percentage, passing efficiency (191.15), yards per play (7.27) and passing yards per attempt (10.81).
The impact of Golesh’s up-tempo offense over the last two seasons has been remarkable for a program that ranked 108th in the FBS in scoring (21.5 ppg) and 102nd in the FBS in total offense (346.2 ypg) a year prior to his and head coach Josh Heupel‘s arrivals.
One season after shattering eight team single-season records, the Vols have already set a program record for total points (512) this season with two games left to play and are on the cusp of breaking a handful of others. Tennessee has also tied the program record for touchdowns with 67, needing just one more to break that mark that was set just last year.
Golesh is in his 19th season at the collegiate level having enjoyed success at every stop of his career. Prior to spending the 2020 season as the co-offensive coordinator and tight ends coach at UCF, he served as the tight ends coach and recruiting coordinator at Iowa State from 2016-19 on Matt Campbell’s staff.
Golesh grew up in Brooklyn, New York, and earned a bachelor’s degree from Ohio State in 2006. He got his start in the coaching profession as a student assistant with the Buckeyes.
The five finalists for the Broyles Award will be announced on Nov. 29. The recipient of the award will be unveiled on Dec. 6 in downtown Little Rock, Arkansas.
-UT Athletics
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — The Tallahassee Quarterback Club Foundation, Inc., announced Monday morning that Tennessee wide receiver Jalin Hyatt is one of 12 semifinalists for the 2022 Biletnikoff Award.
The Biletnikoff Award annually recognizes the college football season’s 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. As such, the Biletnikoff Award recognizes college football’s outstanding receiver, not merely college football’s outstanding wide receiver.
The junior from Irmo, South Carolina, has put together a historic 2022 campaign for the Big Orange. Hyatt’s school-record 15 touchdowns lead the FBS, while his 1,181 receiving yards and 107.4 yards per game lead the SEC and rank third nationally.
A semifinalist for the Maxwell Award and Walter Camp Player of the Year, Hyatt leads the country with five multi-touchdown receiving efforts and sits third nationally with five 100-yard games. He is tops in the FBS in 30+ yard receiving plays (14), 40+ yard receiving plays (10), 50+ yard plays (6) and 60+ yard receiving plays (4). He has produced more 40-yard receiving plays this season (10) than 11 SEC teams have recorded as a team.
With six catches for 65 yards this past weekend at South Carolina, Hyatt moved into second place in UT single-season history in receiving yards (1,181) and is 117 yards shy of tying the program record. His SEC-leading 64 receptions are tied for the eighth-most in school history. On the career charts, Hyatt’s 19 receiving touchdowns tie with Peerless Price as the fourth-most ever recorded by a Tennessee Volunteer.
Hyatt joins three former Vols that have been tabbed as semifinalists for the Biletnikoff Award: Joey Kent (1996), Kelley Washington (2001) and Robert Meachem (2006).
The semifinalists, finalists, and award recipient are selected by the highly distinguished Biletnikoff Award National Selection Committee, a group of 610 prominent college football journalists, commentators, announcers, Biletnikoff Award winners, and other former receivers. Three finalists will be announced Tuesday, Nov. 29, before the winner is announced Thursday, Dec. 8 on The Home Depot College Football Awards show, set to air on ESPN at 8:30 p.m. ET.
2022 Biletnikoff Award Semifinalists
Jordan Addison, USC
Brock Bowers, Georgia
Nathaniel Dell, Houston
Josh Downs, North Carolina
Zay Flowers, Boston College
Marvin Harrison Jr., Ohio State
Xavier Hutchinson, Iowa State
Jalin Hyatt, Tennessee
Quentin Johnston, TCU
Charlie Jones, Purdue
Rashee Rice, SMU
Keylon Stokes, Tulsa
-UT Athletics
The 22nd-ranked Tennessee men’s basketball heads to the Bahamas this week for the Battle 4 Atlantis, set to take on Butler in their opening game on Wednesday at approximately 7:30 p.m. ET.
Fans can catch Wednesday’s game on ESPN2 and online or on any mobile device through WatchESPN. WatchESPN can be accessed through the ESPN App, or online at espn.com/watch. Kevin Fitzgerald (play-by-play) and Carolyn Peck (analyst) will have the call.
Fans can also listen live on their local Vol Network affiliate to hear Brian Rice and Bert Bertelkamp describing the action.
Tennessee (2-1) is coming off an 81-50 home win over Florida Gulf Coast. Seniors Josiah-Jordan James and Olivier Nkamhoua led the Vols with 18 points apiece, while defensively, the Vols limited Florida Gulf Coast to 30.4 percent shooting from the field.
This week marks Tennessee’s third time participating in the Battle 4 Atlantis, as the Vols took home a fifth-place finish in 2013 and a third-place finish in 2017. The Vols are 4-2 overall in the event.
Depending on the result of Wednesday’s opening game in the Bahamas, Tennessee will face either BYU or USC on Thursday. In result of a win, tip-off will be at 1:30 p.m. ET on ESPN2. If Butler wins Wednesday, Tennessee will play at 6:30 p.m. ET on ESPN3.
THE SERIES
• Tennessee trails its all-time series with Butler, 2-3, dating to 1958.
• The programs have met twice previously at neutral sites, with Butler winning in New York City in 2006 and UT winning in the 2008 NCAA Tournament in Birmingham, Alabama.
• The Volunteers are 30-27 all-time against current members of the Big East Conference.
• Rick Barnes is 42-50 as a head coach vs. the current Big East configuration—which differs from his tenure as the head coach at Providence (1988-94)—and he is 0-2 against Butler.
• During Tennessee’s trip to Indy for last season’s NCAA Tournament, the Vols practiced at Butler’s Hinkle Fieldhouse.
• First-year Butler Strength & Conditioning coach Tyler Watson recently spent two seasons (2019-21) as the director of women’s basketball sports performance on Kellie Harper’s staff at Tennessee.
SCOUTING REPORT
• Senior big man Uroš Plavšic suffered a right ankle injury early in Tennessee’s game vs. Colorado Nov. 13. He sat out the Florida Gulf Coast game last Wednesday and is aiming to return to against Butler.
• Senior wing Josiah-Jordan James is shooting an SEC-best .526 from 3-point range this season (10 of 19).
• Santiago Vescovi needs only two 3-pointers to become the seventh Vol ever to make 200.
• With Zakai Zeigler as the primary defender, opponents this season are shooting 5-for-23 (.217).
• According to KenPom, the Vols rank fourth in the nation in adjusted defensive efficiency, allowing only 86.5 points per 100 possessions.
• 57.1 percent of Tennessee’s shot attempts this season have been 3-pointers. That’s the highest rate in the country. And 48.5 percent of UT’s made field goals have been from beyond the arc.
• The Volunteers are averaging 13.7 steals per game and are scoring 19.3 points per game off turnovers.
• Tennessee’s projected starters—Tyreke Key, Santiago Vescovi, Julian Phillips, Josiah-Jordan James and Olivier Nkamhoua—combine to account for 370 games played, 280 starts and a staggering 3,785 collegiate points scored.
THURSDAY SCENARIOS
• The Vols are a perfect 2-0 all-time against BYU, with home wins in 1957 and 1980.
• Tennessee owns a 9-7 all-time record against current members of the West Coast Conference. The Vols defeated WCC powerhouse Gonzaga in exhibition play Oct. 28.
• The Big Orange lead their all-time series with Southern Cal, 4-3, dating to 1967. The programs have never met at a neutral site.
• The Vols own a 22-13 all-time record against current members of the Pac 12 Conference. UT fell to Colorado earlier this season.
• Looking ahead to Friday, possible opponents for the Vols include Dayton, Kansas, NC State or Wisconsin.
ABOUT BUTLER
• In its first four games of the season, Butler (3-1) picked up three home wins over mid-major opponents (New Orleans, Saint Francis and The Citadel), while falling on the road at Penn State last week, 68-62.
• Former longtime Ohio State head coach Thad Matta is in his first season at the helm of the Butler program. Matta, who was the head coach at Ohio State from 2004-17, is a 1990 graduate of Butler University and previously was the program’s head coach during the 2000-01 season.
• Now in his 18th year as a college head coach, Matta is 442-155 (.740) overall in stints at Ohio State, Xavier and Butler.
• Two of Matta’s former players from his time at Ohio State are members of Butler’s basketball support staff. Greg Oden, a Buckeye during the 2006-07 season and the No. 1 overall pick in the 2007 NBA Draft, is Butler’s Director of Basketball Operations. Jon Diebler, who played at Ohio State from 2007-11, is Butler’s Director of Recruiting.
• Butler was picked to finish eighth in the 11-team Big East in the conference’s coaches preseason poll. Junior guard Chuck Harris was named a preseason All-Big East Honorable Mention.
• Harris, Butler’s leading scorer through four games with a 15.8 ppg mark, has been the Bulldogs’ leading scorer during each of the past two seasons.
• Butler’s leading rebounder and fourth-leading scorer is NC State transfer center Manny Bates, who is averaging 13.5 ppg and 8.5 rpg. Bates was a two-year starter for the Wolfpack during the 2019-20 and 2020-21 seasons (missed last season due to injury) and tallied 147 blocked shots during his career, which ranks fourth in program history at NC State.
LAST MEETING WITH BUTLER
• Kevin Punter Jr. scored 27 points, and Armani Moore had 17, but Tennessee’s second-half comeback came up short as the Vols fell to No. 18 Butler, 94-86, at historic Hinkle Fieldhouse on Dec. 12, 2015.
• Tennessee outshot the Bulldogs from the field, hitting at a 49.2 percent clip to Butler’s 46.8 percent shooting. Butler led by as many as 11 points in the second half, but strong all-around play from Moore, and Punter’s scoring, kept UT in the game late.
• Punter was 10-of-23 from the field and 3-of-10 from 3-point range. He scored 17 of his 27 points in the first half, and his hot start led the Vols to a 25-15 lead over the first 10 minutes before Butler seized the lead four minutes prior to halftime.
• Tennessee led by as many as 10 points in the first half (25-15 at 9:43).
• A 3-pointer by Punter with 14:57 left in the first half sparked a 19-7 Vols run. Tennessee made five treys in that stretch, with Punter and Shembari Phillips making two apiece.
• Moore scored 13 of his 17 points in the second half and added six rebounds. He tied his career-high with seven assists.
• Making his first career start, UT freshman forward (and eventual NBA Draft pick) Admiral Schofield had a then-career-high 16 points and seven rebounds. Vols senior Devon Baulkman added 13 points and five rebounds.
• Kelan Martin paced Butler with 25 points and 11 rebounds off the bench. Roosevelt Jones had 21 points, 10 assists and seven rebounds in his battle with Moore in the paint.
BUTLER’S STAFF HAS HISTORY VS. VOLS
• Butler head coach Thad Matta, assistant coach Kevin Kuwik, director of recruiting Jon Diebler and director of basketball operations Greg Oden all faced Tennessee during their time at Ohio State.
• Between 2007 and 2010, Matta’s Buckeyes teams went 2-2 against the Vols, with a pair of NCAA Tournament clashes (recaps linked below). Matta won his first two meetings against UT, while the Vols claimed the two most recent contests.
• On Jan. 13, 2007, Oden shined in Ohio State’s 68-66 home win over Tennessee, finishing with 24 points and 15 rebounds—both game-highs.
• Two months later, when the Vols and Buckeyes later met in the 2007 South Region semifinal at the Alamodome, Oden delivered a game-sealing block at the final buzzer, securing an 85-84 triumph for No. 1-seeded Ohio State. After battling foul trouble in the first half, Oden finished with nine points, three rebounds and four blocks.
• Diebler started and played all 40 minutes of the 2010 Midwest Region semifinal showdown in St. Louis, which the Vols won, 76-73, to advance to the Elite Eight. Diebler shot 1-for-8 with three points and a steal in the loss. Kuwik was Ohio State’s video coordinator during that 2009-10 season.
UT MAKING THIRD TRIP TO ATLANTIS
• Tennessee is making its third appearance at the Battle 4 Atlantis tournament at Atlantis Resort on Paradise Island, Bahamas.
• The Vols posted a fifth-place finish at the eight-team event in 2013 and then finished in third place under head coach Rick Barnes in 2017.
• This year’s field includes Butler, BYU, Dayton, Kansas, NC State, Southern Cal and Wisconsin.
• Tennessee and NC State are on opposite sides of this year’s bracket. Tennessee associate head coach Justin Gainey starred at point guard for the Wolfpack from 1997-2000.
2017 TRIP TO ATLANTIS “BEST WEEK” OF VESCOVI’S LIFE
• Vols senior Santiago Vescovi describes a 2017 trip to Atlantis Resort as the “best week” of his life.
• Atlantis hosted a Basketball Without Borders camp in July of 2017. Participants from 16 countries included Vescovi, Kofi Cockburn and many others.
• Vescovi—then 15 years old—shined at the camp and was selected for the All-Star Game, in which his coaching staff included current Los Angeles Lakers head coach Darvin Ham.
• Vescovi’s performance that week helped to accelerate his global basketball journey, which led first to the NBA Academy system and then to Tennessee.
VOLS LEAD NATION IN ASSIST RATE
• Tennessee has assisted on 75.8 percent of its made baskets thus far. That assist rate is the best among all Division I teams.
• While the Vols have played only three games, six players have recorded at least five assists. Santiago Vescovi and Zakai Zeigler lead the way with 11 and 10 assists, respectively.
-UT Athletics
Box Score (PDF) | Highlights | Horston/Harper/Franklin Presser | Photo Gallery
PARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas — No. 23 Tennessee fell to Gonzaga on Monday in a 73-72 nail-biter that featured 15 lead changes and nine ties. With the loss, the Lady Vols take fourth place in the 2022 Bad Boy Mowers Battle 4 Atlantis.
Seniors Jordan Horston and Rickea Jackson were the top scorers for UT (2-4) with 19 and 16, respectively, while graduate Jasmine Franklin narrowly missed a double-double with 11 points and nine rebounds.
Yvonne Ejim led the Zags (5-1) with 22 points, 20 of which came in the second half. Kaylynne Truong was also in double digits with 14 points, and McKayla Williams turned in 12.
Both teams came out of the gate hot, with Gonzaga shooting a perfect five of five to open the game, and Tennessee going five of seven while forcing two turnovers to result in five lead changes in just over three minutes of play. An old-fashioned three-point play by Horston at the 6:47 mark had the Lady Vols on top by two, but a 3-pointer from Truong put the Zags ahead by one at 15-14 a minute later. Franklin hit a pair of free throws to give UT a one-point advantage, but Truong once again answered with a trey, and GU led by two with 4:37 to go in the first. Jordan Walker tied it back up from the free-throw line at 18-all, but then the Lady Vols fell into a scoring slump as the Bulldogs closed out the period with two more threes to lead 24-18 by the buzzer.
Horston hit a layup on the fast break to open the scoring in the second, and a 3-pointer by Tess Darby gave UT a one-point advantage two and a half minutes into the quarter. The teams swapped buckets until the 3:11 mark when Horston nailed a trey, and the Lady Vols forced a turnover that Jackson turned into two quick points on the layup to stretch UT’s lead to four at 32-28 with 3:05 to go in the half. Truong cut it back to a two-point game from the free-throw line, but Horston and Tamari Key closed out the half with back-to-back buckets to put Tennessee ahead at the break, 36-30.
The Lady Vols went up seven off a Jasmine Powell free throw to start the second half, but Gonzaga whittled it down to four by the 7:17 mark. Powell fired in a jumper 12 seconds later, setting off a 6-0 run that put UT up 45-36 with five and a half minutes left in the quarter. The Bulldogs responded with a 9-2 run to narrow the spread to two points by the 2:47 mark. Horston and Key made layups on UT’s next two possessions, but the Zags answered with six straight points to tie the game at 51-all with 1:28 to go in the third. Key converted on the second of a pair of free throws, and Powell added a layup before Truong hit a free throw of her own to send the game into the fourth stanza with UT leading 54-52.
The Bulldogs opened the final quarter with a 6-1 run to lead by three with 8:27 left in the game, but the Lady Vols bounced back with six straight points to go up 61-58 by the 6:08 mark. The Zags crept back within one three times over the next three minutes before knotting it up at 66 with 3:08 to play. Horston put in a layup on the next play, and Jackson followed it up with a jumper to give UT a four-point cushion with two minutes left in the contest. Ejim drained a three with 1:12 on the clock and followed it up with a layup on the next trip down the court to reclaim the lead for GU at 71-70, but Horston nailed a 10-foot jumper with 36 seconds left in the contest to put the Big Orange on top. Gonzaga got the ball to Williams underneath the basket on its next play, but Jackson blocked a would-be layup, and UT regained possession. A turnover on the inbound play gave GU the ball back underneath its goal, and an Ejim layup put the Bulldogs on top, 73-72. The Lady Vols put up three shots in the closing seconds but couldn’t convert, and the final horn sounded with UT trailing by one.
UP NEXT: Tennessee will return to Knoxville where it will kick off a six-game homestand by hosting Colorado in a 7 p.m. ET matchup on Friday. The game will be televised on SEC Network.
ALL-TOURNEY HONORS: Senior Rickea Jackson was named to the Bad Boy Mowers Women’s Battle 4 Atlantis All-Tournament Team. The forward led UT in scoring with 56 points over three games to average 18.7 ppg. and 5.3 rpg. while in the Bahamas.
-UT Athletics
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PARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas — No. 23 Tennessee fell to Gonzaga on Monday in a 73-72 nail-biter that featured 15 lead changes and nine ties. With the loss, the Lady Vols take fourth place in the 2022 Bad Boy Mowers Battle 4 Atlantis.
Seniors Jordan Horston and Rickea Jackson were the top scorers for UT (2-4) with 19 and 16, respectively, while graduate Jasmine Franklin narrowly missed a double-double with 11 points and nine rebounds.
Yvonne Ejim led the Zags (5-1) with 22 points, 20 of which came in the second half. Kaylynne Truong was also in double digits with 14 points, and McKayla Williams turned in 12.
Both teams came out of the gate hot, with Gonzaga shooting a perfect five of five to open the game, and Tennessee going five of seven while forcing two turnovers to result in five lead changes in just over three minutes of play. An old-fashioned three-point play by Horston at the 6:47 mark had the Lady Vols on top by two, but a 3-pointer from Truong put the Zags ahead by one at 15-14 a minute later. Franklin hit a pair of free throws to give UT a one-point advantage, but Truong once again answered with a trey, and GU led by two with 4:37 to go in the first. Jordan Walker tied it back up from the free-throw line at 18-all, but then the Lady Vols fell into a scoring slump as the Bulldogs closed out the period with two more threes to lead 24-18 by the buzzer.
Horston hit a layup on the fast break to open the scoring in the second, and a 3-pointer by Tess Darby gave UT a one-point advantage two and a half minutes into the quarter. The teams swapped buckets until the 3:11 mark when Horston nailed a trey, and the Lady Vols forced a turnover that Jackson turned into two quick points on the layup to stretch UT’s lead to four at 32-28 with 3:05 to go in the half. Truong cut it back to a two-point game from the free-throw line, but Horston and Tamari Key closed out the half with back-to-back buckets to put Tennessee ahead at the break, 36-30.
The Lady Vols went up seven off a Jasmine Powell free throw to start the second half, but Gonzaga whittled it down to four by the 7:17 mark. Powell fired in a jumper 12 seconds later, setting off a 6-0 run that put UT up 45-36 with five and a half minutes left in the quarter. The Bulldogs responded with a 9-2 run to narrow the spread to two points by the 2:47 mark. Horston and Key made layups on UT’s next two possessions, but the Zags answered with six straight points to tie the game at 51-all with 1:28 to go in the third. Key converted on the second of a pair of free throws, and Powell added a layup before Truong hit a free throw of her own to send the game into the fourth stanza with UT leading 54-52.
The Bulldogs opened the final quarter with a 6-1 run to lead by three with 8:27 left in the game, but the Lady Vols bounced back with six straight points to go up 61-58 by the 6:08 mark. The Zags crept back within one three times over the next three minutes before knotting it up at 66 with 3:08 to play. Horston put in a layup on the next play, and Jackson followed it up with a jumper to give UT a four-point cushion with two minutes left in the contest. Ejim drained a three with 1:12 on the clock and followed it up with a layup on the next trip down the court to reclaim the lead for GU at 71-70, but Horston nailed a 10-foot jumper with 36 seconds left in the contest to put the Big Orange on top. Gonzaga got the ball to Williams underneath the basket on its next play, but Jackson blocked a would-be layup, and UT regained possession. A turnover on the inbound play gave GU the ball back underneath its goal, and an Ejim layup put the Bulldogs on top, 73-72. The Lady Vols put up three shots in the closing seconds but couldn’t convert, and the final horn sounded with UT trailing by one.
UP NEXT: Tennessee will return to Knoxville where it will kick off a six-game homestand by hosting Colorado in a 7 p.m. ET matchup on Friday. The game will be televised on SEC Network.
ALL-TOURNEY HONORS: Senior Rickea Jackson was named to the Bad Boy Mowers Women’s Battle 4 Atlantis All-Tournament Team. The forward led UT in scoring with 56 points over three games to average 18.7 ppg. and 5.3 rpg. while in the Bahamas.
-UT Athletics
Tennessee defensive tackle Omari Thomas spoke the media on Monday ahead of Saturday’s regular season finale at Vanderbilt.
Tennessee linebacker Aaron Beasley spoke the media on Monday ahead of Saturday’s regular season finale at Vanderbilt.