Tennessee defensive tackle Omari Thomas spoke with the media Monday to look back on the big win over Alabama and ahead to the rest of the season.

Tennessee defensive tackle Omari Thomas spoke with the media Monday to look back on the big win over Alabama and ahead to the rest of the season.
Tennessee tight end Princeton Fant spoke with the media Monday to look back on the big win over Alabama and ahead to the rest of the season.
Tennessee tight end Princeton Fant spoke with the media Monday to look back on the big win over Alabama and ahead to the rest of the season.
Tennessee head coach Josh Heupel spoke to the media at this weekly game week press conference on Monday ahead of Saturday’s game vs. UT-Martin.
Tennessee head coach Josh Heupel spoke to the media at this weekly game week press conference on Monday ahead of Saturday’s game vs. UT-Martin.
NEW HAVEN, Conn. – After engraving his name in the Tennessee record books and gaining national attention for his five-touchdown contest against No. 3/1 Alabama, junior wide receiver Jalin Hyatt was named the Walter Camp National Offensive Player of the Week, Sunday afternoon by the Walter Camp Football Foundation.
Hyatt has stepped up to be a critical component of UT’s potent offensive attack, that was on full display in front of a national audience in the marquee game slot against the Crimson Tide defense on Saturday afternoon inside of a sold-out Neyland Stadium.
Hyatt had set a Tennessee program record with five receiving touchdowns, while tying the Southeastern Conference record as part of his six-catch, 207-yard performance. He became the first Vol since Cordarrelle Patterson to have over 200 yards receiving in a single game. Patterson, currently on the Atlanta Falcons, tallied 219 yards against Troy back in 2012. He is the second Vol receiver in the Heupel-Era to reach 200 yards as teammate Cedric Tillman posted exactly 200 yards a season ago against Georgia.
Hyatt’s performance also netted him 30 points scored, matching the program record of 30 set by Gene McEver vs. South Carolina n Dec. 7, 1929. Hyatt’s point total stands alone as the modern-era record, surpassing six VFLs who had all gone for 24 points. Hyatt’s 207 receiving yards also ranks as the sixth-most single game receiving yards in program history.
Most remarkably, Hyatt averaged 34.5 yards per reception. As a receiver known for big-play potential, that certainly shined through against the Tide as his touchdown receptions went for 36-, 11-, 60-, 78- and 13-yards, in that order. His longest-career reception, the 78-yard catch-and-run, came on the Vols’ first drive of the fourth quarter and marked a shift in momentum the Big Orange would carry throughout the period to emerge victorious against Alabama for the first time in 15 years, 52-49.
Hyatt and the Volunteers will be back at Neyland Stadium next weekend when they host UT Martin for Homecoming at noon ET on SEC Network. Tickets for the matchup with the Skyhawks are available in limited quantities at AllVols.com. In addition, season tickets for the 2023 campaign are on sale now at AllVols.com.
-UT Athletics
BIRMINGHAM, Alabama (October 16, 2022) – The Southeastern Conference announced today that the University of Tennessee will be fined for a violation of the league’s access to competition area policy due to fans entering the field following its football game against the University of Alabama on October 15.
Tennessee will incur a fine of $100,000 for a second offense under the league’s access to competition area policy. Tennessee was last fined for a violation following a basketball game against Florida in 2006.
Fines levied against schools for violation of the access to competition area policy are deposited into the SEC Post-Graduate Scholarship Fund.
The policy states that “access to competition areas shall be limited to participating student-athletes, coaches, officials, support personnel and properly-credentialed individuals at all times. For the safety of participants and spectators alike, at no time before, during or after a contest shall spectators be permitted to enter the competition area. It is the responsibility of each member institution to implement procedures to ensure compliance with this policy.”
Financial penalties are imposed for violations in all sports sponsored by the Conference. Institutional penalties range from $50,000 for a first offense to fines of up to $100,000 for a second offense and up to $250,000 for a third and subsequent offenses. The policy was originally adopted by a vote of Conference members in 2004 and financial penalties were increased by action taken by the membership during the 2015 SEC Spring Meetings.
-SEC
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Following a historic 52-49 victory over No. 3/1 Alabama, the Tennessee Volunteers climbed once again in both the Associated Press Top 25 and the USA TODAY AFCA Coaches Poll, rising to No. 3 in the AP and No. 4 in the coaches.
Tennessee (6-0, 3-0 SEC) coupled 15 first-place votes with its No 3-ranking in the AP, representing the first time since Sept. 12, 1999, that the Vols earned such votes. Tennessee’s No. 3 ranking is its highest in the AP since opening the 2005 season in the same spot.
The Vols are the only team in America with four victories over AP Top 25 teams at the time of the meeting. They are the first team in college football history to start a season 6-0, beat four AP Top 25 opponents ranked at the time of the meeting and score at least 30 points in the first six games of a single season.
Tennessee returns to Neyland Stadium next Saturday for Homecoming against UT Martin at noon ET on SEC Network. Tickets for the contest are available in limited quantities at AllVols.com. In addition, season tickets for the 2023 campaign are on sale now at AllVols.com.
The full AP Top 25, along with the AFCA Coaches Poll, can be found below.
Vols in the Polls
Preseason: RV AP, RV Coaches
Sept. 6: 24 AP, RV Coaches
Sept. 11: 15 AP, 16 Coaches
Sept. 18: 11 AP, 12 Coaches
Sept. 25: 8 AP, 9 Coaches
Oct. 2: 8 AP, 8 Coaches
Oct. 9: 6 AP, 8 Coaches
Oct. 16: 3 AP, 4 Coaches
Associated Press Top 25
1. Georgia (31)
2. Ohio State (17)
3. Tennessee (15)
4. Michigan
5. Clemson
6. Alabama
7. Ole Miss
8. TCU
9. UCLA
10. Oregon
11. Oklahoma State
12. Southern Cal
13. Wake Forest
14. Syracuse
15. Utah
16. Penn State
17. Kansas State
18. Illinois
19. Kentucky
20. Texas
21. Cincinnati
22. North Carolina
23. NC State
24. Mississippi State
25. Tulane
Others receiving votes: Purdue, LSU, UCF, South Carolina, Kansas, Oregon State, James Madison, Maryland, South Alabama, Liberty, Minnesota, Florida State, Arkansas
USA TODAY AFCA Coaches Poll
1. Georgia (43)
2. Ohio State (17)
3. Michigan (1)
4. Tennessee (2)
5. Clemson
6. Alabama
7. Ole Miss
8. TCU
9. Oregon
10. UCLA
11. Oklahoma State
12. Southern Cal
13. Wake Forest
14. Syracuse
15. Utah
16. Penn State
17. Kansas State
18. Kentucky
19. Cincinnati
20. Illinois
21. Texas
22. North Carolina
23. NC State
24. Mississippi State
25. Tulane
Others receiving votes: LSU, UCF, Kansas, South Carolina, Purdue, Maryland, Liberty, Washington, Baylor, Coastal Carolina, Pitt, South Alabama, Arkansas, UTSA
-UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Following a historic 52-49 victory over No. 3/1 Alabama, the Tennessee Volunteers climbed once again in both the Associated Press Top 25 and the USA TODAY AFCA Coaches Poll, rising to No. 3 in the AP and No. 4 in the coaches.
Tennessee (6-0, 3-0 SEC) coupled 15 first-place votes with its No 3-ranking in the AP, representing the first time since Sept. 12, 1999, that the Vols earned such votes. Tennessee’s No. 3 ranking is its highest in the AP since opening the 2005 season in the same spot.
The Vols are the only team in America with four victories over AP Top 25 teams at the time of the meeting. They are the first team in college football history to start a season 6-0, beat four AP Top 25 opponents ranked at the time of the meeting and score at least 30 points in the first six games of a single season.
Tennessee returns to Neyland Stadium next Saturday for Homecoming against UT Martin at noon ET on SEC Network. Tickets for the contest are available in limited quantities at AllVols.com. In addition, season tickets for the 2023 campaign are on sale now at AllVols.com.
The full AP Top 25, along with the AFCA Coaches Poll, can be found below.
Vols in the Polls
Preseason: RV AP, RV Coaches
Sept. 6: 24 AP, RV Coaches
Sept. 11: 15 AP, 16 Coaches
Sept. 18: 11 AP, 12 Coaches
Sept. 25: 8 AP, 9 Coaches
Oct. 2: 8 AP, 8 Coaches
Oct. 9: 6 AP, 8 Coaches
Oct. 16: 3 AP, 4 Coaches
Associated Press Top 25
1. Georgia (31)
2. Ohio State (17)
3. Tennessee (15)
4. Michigan
5. Clemson
6. Alabama
7. Ole Miss
8. TCU
9. UCLA
10. Oregon
11. Oklahoma State
12. Southern Cal
13. Wake Forest
14. Syracuse
15. Utah
16. Penn State
17. Kansas State
18. Illinois
19. Kentucky
20. Texas
21. Cincinnati
22. North Carolina
23. NC State
24. Mississippi State
25. Tulane
Others receiving votes: Purdue, LSU, UCF, South Carolina, Kansas, Oregon State, James Madison, Maryland, South Alabama, Liberty, Minnesota, Florida State, Arkansas
USA TODAY AFCA Coaches Poll
1. Georgia (43)
2. Ohio State (17)
3. Michigan (1)
4. Tennessee (2)
5. Clemson
6. Alabama
7. Ole Miss
8. TCU
9. Oregon
10. UCLA
11. Oklahoma State
12. Southern Cal
13. Wake Forest
14. Syracuse
15. Utah
16. Penn State
17. Kansas State
18. Kentucky
19. Cincinnati
20. Illinois
21. Texas
22. North Carolina
23. NC State
24. Mississippi State
25. Tulane
Others receiving votes: LSU, UCF, Kansas, South Carolina, Purdue, Maryland, Liberty, Washington, Baylor, Coastal Carolina, Pitt, South Alabama, Arkansas, UTSA
-UT Athletics
Final Book (PDF) | Box Score (XML) | Postgame Notes (PDF) | Postgame Quotes (PDF)
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Redshirt senior Chase McGrath kicked a 40-yard field goal as time expired to deliver No. 6/8 Tennessee an epic 52-49 victory over No. 3/1 Alabama in front of a capacity orange-out crowd of 101,915 at Neyland Stadium on a Tennessee Saturday night.
The Vols, who scored their most points ever in the 105-game series, improved to 6-0 overall and 3-0 in the SEC, securing their first triumph over the Crimson Tide since 2006. In surrendering the most points since giving up 54 to Sewanee in 1907, UA fell to 6-1 overall and 3-1 in league play.
Also of note, Tennessee has defeated four ranked teams for the first time in a regular season since 1998. That year, it took care of No. 17 Syracuse, No. 2 Florida, No. 7 Georgia and No. 10 Arkansas.
UT started its game-winning possession at its own 32 with 15 seconds left in the contest, and it seemed overtime was in the offing. With completions of 18 and 27 yards to senior Ramel Keyton and redshirt junior Bru McCoy, respectively, redshirt senior quarterback Hendon Hooker moved the Big Orange down the field expeditiously into field goal range and opened the door for a possible victory in regulation.
McGrath, who missed his first PAT in 98 attempts as a Vol earlier in the contest, came through in the clutch with the hopeful weight of Tennessee fans everywhere on his shoulders. As his kick cleared the crossbar, Big Orange waves of fans spilled out of the stands and covered Shields-Watkins Field as the strains of Rocky Top and Dixieland Delight provided a musical soundtrack to the joyous celebration that included the taking down of both goal posts.
In the win, junior wide receiver Jalin Hyatt enjoyed a school-record day, carding five receiving touchdowns. His scoring catches of 36, 11, 60, 78 and 13 yards enabled him to finish the day with a career-high 207 yards on six receptions. His five receiving touchdowns set a program record and tied the SEC single-game record. Hyatt’s five scores also tied the UT program record for total touchdowns in a game, which was established by Gene McEver on Dec. 7, 1929 vs. South Carolina.
Hooker turned in a 21-of-30 effort for a career high of 385 yards passing and a career-best-tying five scores. The Vol signal-caller also extended his streak of games with at least one touchdown pass to 18, tying Heath Shuler (10/17/92 to 1/1/94) for the school record.
After winning the pregame coin toss and deferring to the second half, Tennessee kicked off to the Crimson Tide. The Big Orange defense allowed one first down on the game-opening drive before forcing a punt that junior Dee Williams returned to the Vol 44.
Hooker quickly led UT down the field, connecting with McCoy and redshirt senior tight end Jacob Warren for passes of 11 and 12 yards, respectively, and carrying the ball himself for 20 yards to help set up junior running back Jabari Small for a one-yard touchdown plunge. McGrath’s point-after-touchdown kick made it 7-0 Tennessee with 10:18 to go in the opening stanza following the seven-play, 56-yard drive that required only one minute and 58 seconds.
Alabama needed just over two minutes to answer. Marching 71 yards in eight plays, the Crimson Tide capped the drive when running back Jahmyr Gibbs bounced outside around left end to score on an eight-yard run. Will Reichard’s point-after evened the score at seven with 7:59 to go in the first quarter.
The tie didn’t last long, as the Vols needed only five plays and 1:16 off the clock to retake the lead. After a third-and-eight pass interference infraction resulted in a 15-yard march-off and UT first down, the Vols got an 11-yard reception from Keyton and an 11-yard rush from sophomore running back Jaylen Wright before Hooker found a wide-open Hyatt streaking down the left seam for a 36-yard touchdown pass. McGrath’s PAT made it 14-7 Vols with 6:43 remaining in the first period.
Tennessee struck again less than three minutes later after forcing a short Bama punt. On play number four of a drive that started on the UA 35, the speedy Hyatt ran an underneath route that he snared in stride, racing 11 yards and slipping past Crimson Tide defenders to ease just inside the right pylon. McGrath was good on the PAT, and the home team’s lead grew to 21-7 with 3:59 still left in the first.
Alabama put points on the board on its next possession, but the Vol defense was able to keep the Tide out of the end zone. Bama settled for a 21-yard Reichard field goal that trimmed UT’s lead to 21-10 with 14:07 left in the second quarter.
UA finally forced Tennessee to punt early in the second frame, but Quandarrius Robinson tried to corral the ball and surrendered possession to UT sophomore Christian Charles. After a 31-yard Hooker to Keyton connection to the nine, tight end Princeton Fant lined up in the fullback spot two plays later and bulled his way into the end zone for a two-yard score. McGrath booted the extra point to make it 28-10 Vols with 11:41 to go in the second period.
Alabama navigated 84 yards to cut into Tennessee’s lead again with 6:46 left in the first half. Junior quarterback Bryce Young found a diving Ja’Corey Brooks for a seven-yard touchdown reception that capped a 10-play drive. Reichard nailed the PAT to make it 28-17.
After coming up with a stop on a fourth-and-six attempt by Tennessee at the Alabama 35, the Crimson Tide managed to work its way into another scoring opportunity. After UT’s defense stiffened, however, UA settled for a 43-yard Reichard field goal that made it 28-20 Vols with 36 seconds to go in the half.
Following a failed fourth-down conversion attempt by the Vols at the Alabama 41, the Crimson Tide turned that stop into points in just three snaps. A 26-yard Gibbs touchdown run and a two-point conversion pass from Young to Brooks knotted the score at 28 with 11:11 remaining in the third quarter.
Tennessee answered in less than a minute. After Small carried 12 yards for a first down on the drive’s second play, the Vols went deep on the next one. Hyatt separated from his defender and Hooker delivered a perfect ball for a 60-yard strike. McGrath’s PAT was off the mark, leaving UT with a 34-28 edge with 10:16 to go in the third frame.
Alabama countered with a 12-play, 75-yard drive to take its first lead. Gibbs hit pay-dirt for the third time on the day, carrying it in from a yard out. Reichard’s kick made it 35-34 Crimson Tide with 4:27 showing on the clock in the third.
After being pinned at their own six on a punt by Alabama, the Vols were undeterred. It took just three plays to ring up go-ahead points, culminated by another Hooker to Hyatt bomb. This time, the duo linked up for a 78-yard touchdown, and Hooker hit Fant for a two-point conversion to push Tennessee back into the lead by seven, 42-35, with 14:01 to go in the final period.
Alabama came right back, tying up the game at 42 with 8:38 left in the game. Young found tight end Cameron Latu for a one-yard scoring toss, and Reichard knocked home the extra point.
A penalty on the ensuing kickoff return once again left UT with starting field position at its own five. On third and three, a bad handoff exchange resulted in a fumble, and the Tide’s Dallas Turner was there to pick it up and carry it into the end zone. Reichard’s kick put Bama back on top, 49-42, with 7:49 remaining.
After an interception appeared to end a potential game-tying Vols’ drive, a pass inference penalty on Alabama gave the Big Orange new life. On the very next play, Hooker fired a laser to a slanting Hyatt for the duo’s fifth scoring connection of the contest. McGrath’s PAT evened the scored at 49 with 3:26 left in the game.
Alabama’s Reichard had a chance to hit a go-ahead field goal with 15 seconds to go, but the Tide kicker missed wide right. That opened the door for the game-winning drive for the Vols.
A first down toss of 18 yards from Hooker to Keyton moved the ball to the 50. Hooker then found a leaping McCoy across the middle for a 27-yard gain to the Alabama 23 with two seconds remaining. With the stage set, McGrath came on and sent the crowd into a field-rushing frenzy with a 40-yard game-ender.
The Vols are back at Neyland Stadium next Saturday, as they host the UT Homecoming Game at noon against UT Martin. SEC Network will have the broadcast.
-UT Athletics