Vols Assume No. 11 Rank in AP Poll, 12 in Coaches

Vols Assume No. 11 Rank in AP Poll, 12 in Coaches

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — After a 63-6 thrashing of Akron on Saturday night, the Tennessee Volunteers climbed up the Associated Press charts yet again, moving into the No. 11 ranking. UT ascended in the AFCA Coaches Poll as well, gaining four spots to the No. 12 ranking.

The No. 11 ranking marks Tennessee’s highest position in the AP poll since October 9, 2016 when Tennessee cracked the top-10 on the charts at No. 9. It also marks the highest position a Heupel-coached team has held since the final poll of the 2018 season when the UCF Knights held the No. 11 spot.

Next Saturday, the Vols welcome No. 20/22 Florida to Knoxville for a 3:30 p.m. showdown inside of Neyland Stadium. The game will mark the first time since 2017 that both teams are ranked entering the game. Tennessee possesses its best rank for the game against Florida since 2005.

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

Associated Press Top 25
1. Georgia (59)
2. Alabama (3)
3. Ohio State (1)
4. Michigan
5. Clemson
6. Oklahoma
7. USC
8. Kentucky
9. Oklahoma State
10. Arkansas
11. Tennessee
12. NC State
13. Utah
14. Penn State
15. Oregon
16. Ole Miss
17. Baylor
18. Washington
19. BYU
20. Florida
21. Wake Forest
22. Texas
23. Texas A&M
24. Pittsburgh
25. Miami (FL)

Others receiving votes: Michigan State, Florida State, Appalachian State, North Carolina, Washington State, Cincinnati, Oregon State, Minnesota, Kansas, Syracuse, LSU, Wisconsin

USA TODAY Coaches Poll
1. Georgia (40)
2. Alabama (24)
3. Ohio State (1)
4. Michigan
5. Clemson
6. Oklahoma
7. USC
8. Oklahoma State
9. Kentucky
10. Arkansas
11. NC State
12. Tennessee
13. Ole Miss
14. Utah
15. Penn State
16. Wake Forest
17. Baylor
18. Oregon
19. Texas
20. Texas A&M
21. Michigan State
22. Florida
23. BYU
24. Washington
25. Miami (FL)

Others receiving votes: Pittsburgh, Florida State, Appalachian State, Oregon State, Washington State, Cincinnati, Minnesota, Syracuse, Iowa State, North Carolina, TCU, Kansas, Air Force, Wisconsin, Duke, LSU, Mississippi State, Notre Dame, Coastal Carolina, East Carolina

-UT Athletics

Vols RB Jaylen Wright / Credit: UT Athletics
ESPN College GameDay Returns to Rocky Top For Saturday’s SEC Opener

ESPN College GameDay Returns to Rocky Top For Saturday’s SEC Opener

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – For the first time since the 2016 season, ESPN College GameDay— college football’s longest-running and most celebrated pregame show­—will originate from the University of Tennessee campus as the Volunteers host Florida for their Southeastern Conference opener on Saturday in Neyland Stadium.

The show airs live on ESPN from 9 a.m. to noon ET Saturday. Live shots will also take place Friday for various ESPN programming and on Saturday morning’s SportsCenter prior to the show. The broadcast location will be announced soon.

Kickoff is set for 3:30 p.m. ET on CBS from a sold-out Neyland Stadium.

It marks the 10th time that Tennessee will host College GameDay and the 22nd time that the Vols have appeared on college football’s most popular pregame show.

Including this Saturday, the past three times that Tennessee has hosted College GameDay has been for a matchup with the Gators. The last occurred on Sept. 24, 2016, a game that saw the 14th-ranked Vols rally from a 21-0 deficit to beat 19th-ranked Florida, 38-28, as quarterback Joshua Dobbs accounted for five touchdowns.

Saturday marks the ninth Tennessee-Florida game that College GameDay has broadcast from. The series is tied for the third-most frequently visited matchup by the show, trailing only Alabama-LSU (11) and Ohio State-Penn State (11). Alabama-Georgia has also been a part of nine broadcasts.

No. 15/16 Tennessee is off to its first 3-0 start since the 2016 season. Led by sixth-year senior quarterback Hendon Hooker, the Vols own the nation’s fourth-highest scoring offense (52.0) and are third in the FBS in total offense (553.7).

No. 18/21 Florida enters the game with a 2-1 record following a 32-28 victory over USF on Saturday night in Gainesville.

Saturday’s UT SEC opener will also see the return of #CheckerNeyland, which showcases the Vols’ iconic checkerboard pattern through Neyland Stadium.

Fans are encouraged to wear orange or white, depending on their seat location. To find out if your seat section is orange or white, go to CheckerNeyland.com and enter your section/row/seat number as it appears on your digital ticket. Fans in the North End Zone Party Deck are encouraged to wear white. 

Fans are strongly encouraged to arrive early and have their digital parking passes and tickets ready. Gate 21 Will Call opens at 11:30 a.m., and gates to Neyland Stadium open at 1:30 p.m.

All-Time Tennessee ESPN College GameDay Appearances

1995
Sept. 9, 1995; Georgia at No. 8 Tennessee                                    
Oct. 14, 1995; No. 6 Tennessee at No. 12 Alabama                       

1996
Sept. 21, 1996; No. 4 Florida at No. 2 Tennessee               

1997
Sept. 20, 1997; No. 4 Tennessee at No. 2 Florida               
Jan. 2, 1998; No. 3 Tennessee vs. No. 2 Nebraska Orange Bowl (Miami, Fla.)

1998
Oct. 10, 1998; No. 4 Tennessee at No. 7 Georgia              
Jan. 4, 1999; No. 2 Florida State vs. No. 1 Tennessee     
BCS National Championship Game / Fiesta Bowl (Tempe, Ariz.)

1999
Sept. 18, 1999; No. 2 Tennessee at No. 4 Florida               
Nov. 6, 1999; No. 24 Notre Dame at No. 4 Tennessee    

2000
Sept. 16, 2000; No. 6 Florida at No. 11 Tennessee               

2001
Dec. 1, 2001; No. 5 Tennessee at No. 2 Florida                

2002
Sept. 21, 2002; No. 10 Florida at No. 4 Tennessee              
Nov. 9, 2002; No. 2 Miami at Tennessee                           

2004
Oct. 2, 2004; No. 8 Auburn at No. 10 Tennessee             
Dec. 4, 2004; No. 15 Tennessee vs. No. 3 Auburn SEC Championship (Atlanta, Ga.)

2006
Oct. 28, 2006; No. 8 Tennessee at South Carolina            
Nov. 11, 2006; No. 13 Tennessee at No. 11 Arkansas          

2012
Sept. 15, 2012; No. 18 Florida at No. 23 Tennessee                        

2016
Sept. 10, 2016; Virginia Tech vs. No. 17 Tennessee Battle at Bristol (Bristol, Tenn.)
Sept. 24, 2016; No. 19 Florida at No. 14 Tennessee             
Oct. 8, 2016; No. 9 Tennessee at No. 8 Texas A&M

2022
Sept. 24, 2022; No. 18 Florida at No. 15 Tennessee

Note: College GameDay was originally scheduled to originate from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, for No. 10 Tennessee at No. 4 LSU on Sept. 24, 2005, but the game was postponed to Monday, Sept. 26, due to the approach of Hurricane Rita.

-UT Athletics

ESPN College GameDay / Credit: UT Athletics
#CheckerNeyland Returns To Sold-out Neyland Stadium For SEC Opener

#CheckerNeyland Returns To Sold-out Neyland Stadium For SEC Opener

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – An electric, sold-out Neyland Stadium awaits Tennessee’s Southeastern Conference opener against Florida next Saturday in what will see the return of the Volunteers’ popular fan-driven initiative #CheckerNeyland.

Kickoff is set for 3:30 p.m. ET on CBS.

#CheckerNeyland showcases Tennessee’s iconic checkerboard pattern through Neyland Stadium, which will be sold out for a second consecutive game. This will be the sixth #CheckerNeyland in program history.

Fans are encouraged to wear orange or white, depending on their seat location. To find out if your seat section is orange or white, go to CheckerNeyland.com and enter your section/row/seat number as it appears on your digital ticket.

Fans are strongly encouraged to arrive early and have their digital parking passes and tickets ready. Gate 21 Will Call opens at 11:30 a.m., and gates to Neyland Stadium open at 1:30 p.m.

The only authorized sources for tickets to Tennessee football are the Tennessee Athletics Ticket Office, AllVols.com, Neyland Stadium Will Call and Ticketmaster.

A complete step-by-step guide on how to best access and use your digital tickets and parking passes, including diagrams and FAQ is available here.

-UT Athletics

Neyland Stadium / Credit: UT Athletics
Jimmy blog’s: Hyatt still humble and hungry despite great start

Jimmy blog’s: Hyatt still humble and hungry despite great start

By Jimmy Hyams

After Jalin Hyatt caught a career-high 11 passes against Pitt, he said he had done nothing.

After Hyatt had a career-high 166 receiving yards against Akron, he shrugged it off.

“We haven’t got into SEC play yet,’’ Hyatt said after the Vols annihilated Akron 63-6 Saturday night at sold out Neyland Stadium. “I want to keep my head down and keep working.’’

Hyatt’s work has paid off so far. The fleet junior has burst onto the scene in splendid fashion with a team-high 18 catches for 267 yards and three touchdowns. He grabbed scoring passes of 57 and 48 yards against Akron while teammate Cedric Tillman nursed an apparent knee injury suffered in the second quarter.

Despite his brilliant play, Hyatt remains humble and hungry, perhaps the result of a disappointing 2021 season when he suffered several drops and was benched after Game Four.

“We’ve got to keep improving if this is gonna be a big year for us,’’ Hyatt said.

After one of Hyatt’s scores, he made a bee-line to receivers coach Kelsey Pope, who was an offensive analyst last year who helped with the wideouts. Last year, Hyatt dropped several passes and was basically benched after the Florida game as Velus Jones Jr. was moved into the slot position.

“When I was struggling (last year) he was trying to get my confidence back up,’’ said Hyatt. “I love Coach Pope. I think he’s the best receivers coach in the country.’’

Tennessee coach Josh Heupel said there isn’t a secret sauce to Hyatt’s rapid rise from a year ago.

“No shortcuts,’’ Heupel said. “He’s a guy that wanted to be great a year ago and worked this offseason to be great. Our coaching staff trusts him. He’s made some big-time plays.’’

Hyatt’s role might increase if Tillman doesn’t return soon. His status is unknown for the Florida game at this time.

“It’s an amazing thing to see,’’ quarterback Hendon Hooker said of Hyatt’s surge in play. “For everyone the lights come on at a different time. He wants to get better. He watches film and asks questions.

“I’m extremely proud of the growth he’s made.’’

After the Ball State game, Hyatt said he predicted he would score UT’s first touchdown of the season.

This time, he said he told his dad before the game he would score twice.

“I told Hyatt he might have two today,’’ Hooker said, smiling.

Hyatt wasn’t the only highlight for the Vols against Akron. Jaylen Wright had 96 yards and two touchdowns on 23 carries. Freshman Dylan Sampson also scored twice, as he gained 58 yards on eight tries. The two running backs got more action after Jabari Small suffered an undisclosed injury on the game’s second play.

Hooker was a crisp 14 of 18 for 298 yards and two touchdowns, giving him 37 for his career to move into seventh place on UT’s all-time list. He has also thrown a touchdown pass in 14 consecutive games, trailing only Heath Shuler’s mark of 18.

Backup Joe Milton continued to impress, hitting 4 of 5 passes for 112 yards and two more scores as UT’s signal-callers were a combined 20 of 25 for 410 yards and four scores.

Tennessee rolled up 676 yards – fifth most in school history. UT has had 600 yards in a game 17 times, three under Heupel.

The offense wasn’t the only bright spot.

Tennessee’s defense held Akron without a touchdown and allowed just 35 yards on 24 rushes. UT also recorded four sacks.

“Our confidence is really high,’’ said safety Jalen McCullough. “But we can’t settle. We’ve got to keep working. Florida (Saturday’s opponent) will try to come in here and light up the scoreboard.’’

Tennessee’s third-down defense has improved remarkably. Akron converted on 1 of 13 tries. Pitt managed just 4 of 18. That’s 5 of 31 in the last two games for a defense that allowed 42% conversion on third downs last year – one of the works marks in the country.

McCullough said UT’s fast striking offense has helped the defense, especially when the Vols take leads of 14-0 or 21-0 or 28-0.

“It puts the opposing offense on the defensive,’’ McCullough said.

That will be the goal against Florida.

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

Jimmy blog’s: Hyatt still humble and hungry despite great start

Jimmy blog’s: Hyatt still humble and hungry despite great start

By Jimmy Hyams

After Jalin Hyatt caught a career-high 11 passes against Pitt, he said he had done nothing.

After Hyatt had a career-high 166 receiving yards against Akron, he shrugged it off.

“We haven’t got into SEC play yet,’’ Hyatt said after the Vols annihilated Akron 63-6 Saturday night at sold out Neyland Stadium. “I want to keep my head down and keep working.’’

Hyatt’s work has paid off so far. The fleet junior has burst onto the scene in splendid fashion with a team-high 18 catches for 267 yards and three touchdowns. He grabbed scoring passes of 57 and 48 yards against Akron while teammate Cedric Tillman nursed an apparent knee injury suffered in the second quarter.

Despite his brilliant play, Hyatt remains humble and hungry, perhaps the result of a disappointing 2021 season when he suffered several drops and was benched after Game Four.

“We’ve got to keep improving if this is gonna be a big year for us,’’ Hyatt said.

After one of Hyatt’s scores, he made a bee-line to receivers coach Kelsey Pope, who was an offensive analyst last year who helped with the wideouts. Last year, Hyatt dropped several passes and was basically benched after the Florida game as Velus Jones Jr. was moved into the slot position.

“When I was struggling (last year) he was trying to get my confidence back up,’’ said Hyatt. “I love Coach Pope. I think he’s the best receivers coach in the country.’’

Tennessee coach Josh Heupel said there isn’t a secret sauce to Hyatt’s rapid rise from a year ago.

“No shortcuts,’’ Heupel said. “He’s a guy that wanted to be great a year ago and worked this offseason to be great. Our coaching staff trusts him. He’s made some big-time plays.’’

Hyatt’s role might increase if Tillman doesn’t return soon. His status is unknown for the Florida game at this time.

“It’s an amazing thing to see,’’ quarterback Hendon Hooker said of Hyatt’s surge in play. “For everyone the lights come on at a different time. He wants to get better. He watches film and asks questions.

“I’m extremely proud of the growth he’s made.’’

After the Ball State game, Hyatt said he predicted he would score UT’s first touchdown of the season.

This time, he said he told his dad before the game he would score twice.

“I told Hyatt he might have two today,’’ Hooker said, smiling.

Hyatt wasn’t the only highlight for the Vols against Akron. Jaylen Wright had 96 yards and two touchdowns on 23 carries. Freshman Dylan Sampson also scored twice, as he gained 58 yards on eight tries. The two running backs got more action after Jabari Small suffered an undisclosed injury on the game’s second play.

Hooker was a crisp 14 of 18 for 298 yards and two touchdowns, giving him 37 for his career to move into seventh place on UT’s all-time list. He has also thrown a touchdown pass in 14 consecutive games, trailing only Heath Shuler’s mark of 18.

Backup Joe Milton continued to impress, hitting 4 of 5 passes for 112 yards and two more scores as UT’s signal-callers were a combined 20 of 25 for 410 yards and four scores.

Tennessee rolled up 676 yards – fifth most in school history. UT has had 600 yards in a game 17 times, three under Heupel.

The offense wasn’t the only bright spot.

Tennessee’s defense held Akron without a touchdown and allowed just 35 yards on 24 rushes. UT also recorded four sacks.

“Our confidence is really high,’’ said safety Jalen McCullough. “But we can’t settle. We’ve got to keep working. Florida (Saturday’s opponent) will try to come in here and light up the scoreboard.’’

Tennessee’s third-down defense has improved remarkably. Akron converted on 1 of 13 tries. Pitt managed just 4 of 18. That’s 5 of 31 in the last two games for a defense that allowed 42% conversion on third downs last year – one of the works marks in the country.

McCullough said UT’s fast striking offense has helped the defense, especially when the Vols take leads of 14-0 or 21-0 or 28-0.

“It puts the opposing offense on the defensive,’’ McCullough said.

That will be the goal against Florida.

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

Stats/Notes/Story: No. 15/16 Volunteers Zap Zips 63-6

Stats/Notes/Story: No. 15/16 Volunteers Zap Zips 63-6

Final Book (PDF) | Box Score (XML) | Postgame Notes (PDF) |

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – No. 15/16 Tennessee rolled up 35 points and 416 yards of total offense in the first half alone and cruised to 63-6 victory over Akron Saturday night in front of a sellout crowd of 101,915 at Neyland Stadium.
 
The packed house against the Zips (1-2) marked the first for the Vols (3-0) in a home game versus a non-conference foe since the Big Orange faithful filled the historic venue against Oklahoma on Sept. 12, 2015.

Tennessee quarterback Hendon Hooker was stellar in the opening 30 minutes and early in the third quarter before retiring to the home sideline. The redshirt-senior produced 251 yards passing on 13-of-17 accuracy in the first half and ended the evening 14-of-18 for 298 yards and two scores.
 
The Volunteer signal caller now has thrown a touchdown pass in 15 straight games, just three shy of the school record of 18 set by Heath Shuler from Oct. 17, 1992, to Jan. 1, 1994. Hooker also improved his total to 37 TD tosses as a Vol, ranking seventh all-time on Rocky Top.
 
Junior receiver Jalin Hyatt and running backs Jaylen Wright and Dylan Sampson had two touchdowns apiece to lead the offense, which accumulated 676 yards of total offense for the fifth-highest total in school history. It marks the third time UT has racked up 600+ yards of total offense under Josh Heupel and stands as the most points scored and largest margin of victory in a game under his leadership.
 
Hyatt caught four passes for career bests of 119 yards and two touchdowns in the first half alone and finished with five receptions for 166 and two TDs, tallying three catches for 47 yards or more. Wright, a sophomore, carried for 96 yards and two scores on 23 attempts, while Sampson, a true freshman, tallied eight rushes for career-best totals of 57 yards and two TDs.
 
Defensively, the Vols blanked Akron in the first half and didn’t allow points until 7:35 remained in the third period. The Zips were held to 276 yards of total offense, including just 35 yards on the ground. The Big Orange had 11 tackles for losses, including four sacks. Freshman linebacker Elijah Herring had two of those quarterback takedowns to lead the team, while fellow linebacker Jeremy Banks was tops in total stops with five.
 
Following an exchange of punts early in the opening quarter, the Vols got on the scoreboard first. A 27-yard, third-down scramble by Hooker and a 19-yard pass from Hooker to redshirt-senior tight end Princeton Fant helped move Tennessee 74 yards in only seven plays. Wright capped the drive of just under two minutes with a two-yard plunge. Chase McGrath’s extra point put UT on top 7-0 with 8:39 to go.
 
The Big Orange forced the Zips to punt on the next series and needed just 1:49 to travel 79 yards, with a 47-yard pass from Hooker to freshman receiver Squirrel White starting the possession in explosive fashion. Four plays later, Hooker executed an option play and pitched to Sampson for a nine-yard dash into the end zone. Redshirt senior Cedric Tillman’s relentless blocking enabled the freshman to reach the goal-line just inside the right pylon. McGrath added the PAT to make it 14-0 with 5:52 to go in the opening stanza.
 
The Vols made it three straight drives with a touchdown, marching 80 yards in six plays over 2:04. Hyatt hauled in a career-long 57-yard reception from Hooker to deliver the decisive blow. McGrath’s kick boosted the margin to 21-0 with only 20 seconds elapsed in the second period.
 
After a 40-yard Akron field goal attempt sailed wide left with 9:27 to go in the second frame and ended the Zips’ first scoring threat of the evening, UT hit paydirt again at the 6:47 mark. Sampson, who also had a 27-yard burst during the drive, took the option pitch from Hooker and scampered 11 yards into the end zone to culminate an eight-play, 78-yard journey. McGrath drilled the extra point to make it 28-0 Vols.
 
Akron again came up empty on the next drive, moving the ball to the UT five before Vol linebacker Jeremy Banks forced a fumble by Daniel George, and defensive end LaTrell Bumphus jumped on the loose ball in the end zone for a touchback. UT promptly made the score 35-0 as Hooker connected with Hyatt for a 48-yard score on play five and McGrath tacked on the PAT with 56 seconds left before the half.
 
The first offensive unit got one more series with Hooker under center in the second half, and it put seven on the board for the sixth-straight series. Covering 55 yards in five plays over 1:46, thanks in large part to a 47-yard toss from Hooker to Hyatt, Wright barreled into the north checkerboard from the one-yard-line for his second tally of the night. McGrath booted the extra point to make it 42-0 with 10:15 left in the third.
 
The Zips finally brought their scoring drought to an end with 7:35 remaining in the third period. They marched 58 yards in seven plays, with Noah Perez sending 35-yard field goal through the uprights to make it 42-3 Tennessee.
 
Tennessee countered with two scores, setting off fireworks on long touchdown passes via Joe Milton III at the end of the third period and with 12:16 to go in the final stanza, respectively, to reset the scoreboard to 56-3. Milton found senior wideout Ramel Keyton streaking downfield for a 57-yard scoring strike and fired a laser to sophomore Walker Merrill for a 38-yarder. McGrath hit the first PAT before Toby Wilson added the next.
 
Akron added a 41-yard Perez field goal with 6:22 left to make the score 56-6. UT responded immediately, however, with Tayven Jackson under center. The freshman became the third Vol quarterback to engineer a scoring drive, calling his own number and capping a 12-play, 75-yard drive with a one-yard jaunt around left end for his first career touchdown. Wilson’s PAT made the final score 63-6.

Tennessee will be back at home next Saturday and open SEC play, as it welcomes No. 18/21 Florida (2-1) to Neyland Stadium for a 3:30 p.m. clash on CBS. Tickets for the contest are already sold out.

-UT Athletics

Vols WR Jalin Hyatt / Credit: UT Athletics
Stats/Notes/Story: No. 15/16 Volunteers Zap Zips 63-6

Stats/Notes/Story: No. 15/16 Volunteers Zap Zips 63-6

Final Book (PDF) | Box Score (XML) | Postgame Notes (PDF) |

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – No. 15/16 Tennessee rolled up 35 points and 416 yards of total offense in the first half alone and cruised to 63-6 victory over Akron Saturday night in front of a sellout crowd of 101,915 at Neyland Stadium.
 
The packed house against the Zips (1-2) marked the first for the Vols (3-0) in a home game versus a non-conference foe since the Big Orange faithful filled the historic venue against Oklahoma on Sept. 12, 2015.

Tennessee quarterback Hendon Hooker was stellar in the opening 30 minutes and early in the third quarter before retiring to the home sideline. The redshirt-senior produced 251 yards passing on 13-of-17 accuracy in the first half and ended the evening 14-of-18 for 298 yards and two scores.
 
The Volunteer signal caller now has thrown a touchdown pass in 15 straight games, just three shy of the school record of 18 set by Heath Shuler from Oct. 17, 1992, to Jan. 1, 1994. Hooker also improved his total to 37 TD tosses as a Vol, ranking seventh all-time on Rocky Top.
 
Junior receiver Jalin Hyatt and running backs Jaylen Wright and Dylan Sampson had two touchdowns apiece to lead the offense, which accumulated 676 yards of total offense for the fifth-highest total in school history. It marks the third time UT has racked up 600+ yards of total offense under Josh Heupel and stands as the most points scored and largest margin of victory in a game under his leadership.
 
Hyatt caught four passes for career bests of 119 yards and two touchdowns in the first half alone and finished with five receptions for 166 and two TDs, tallying three catches for 47 yards or more. Wright, a sophomore, carried for 96 yards and two scores on 23 attempts, while Sampson, a true freshman, tallied eight rushes for career-best totals of 57 yards and two TDs.
 
Defensively, the Vols blanked Akron in the first half and didn’t allow points until 7:35 remained in the third period. The Zips were held to 276 yards of total offense, including just 35 yards on the ground. The Big Orange had 11 tackles for losses, including four sacks. Freshman linebacker Elijah Herring had two of those quarterback takedowns to lead the team, while fellow linebacker Jeremy Banks was tops in total stops with five.
 
Following an exchange of punts early in the opening quarter, the Vols got on the scoreboard first. A 27-yard, third-down scramble by Hooker and a 19-yard pass from Hooker to redshirt-senior tight end Princeton Fant helped move Tennessee 74 yards in only seven plays. Wright capped the drive of just under two minutes with a two-yard plunge. Chase McGrath’s extra point put UT on top 7-0 with 8:39 to go.
 
The Big Orange forced the Zips to punt on the next series and needed just 1:49 to travel 79 yards, with a 47-yard pass from Hooker to freshman receiver Squirrel White starting the possession in explosive fashion. Four plays later, Hooker executed an option play and pitched to Sampson for a nine-yard dash into the end zone. Redshirt senior Cedric Tillman’s relentless blocking enabled the freshman to reach the goal-line just inside the right pylon. McGrath added the PAT to make it 14-0 with 5:52 to go in the opening stanza.
 
The Vols made it three straight drives with a touchdown, marching 80 yards in six plays over 2:04. Hyatt hauled in a career-long 57-yard reception from Hooker to deliver the decisive blow. McGrath’s kick boosted the margin to 21-0 with only 20 seconds elapsed in the second period.
 
After a 40-yard Akron field goal attempt sailed wide left with 9:27 to go in the second frame and ended the Zips’ first scoring threat of the evening, UT hit paydirt again at the 6:47 mark. Sampson, who also had a 27-yard burst during the drive, took the option pitch from Hooker and scampered 11 yards into the end zone to culminate an eight-play, 78-yard journey. McGrath drilled the extra point to make it 28-0 Vols.
 
Akron again came up empty on the next drive, moving the ball to the UT five before Vol linebacker Jeremy Banks forced a fumble by Daniel George, and defensive end LaTrell Bumphus jumped on the loose ball in the end zone for a touchback. UT promptly made the score 35-0 as Hooker connected with Hyatt for a 48-yard score on play five and McGrath tacked on the PAT with 56 seconds left before the half.
 
The first offensive unit got one more series with Hooker under center in the second half, and it put seven on the board for the sixth-straight series. Covering 55 yards in five plays over 1:46, thanks in large part to a 47-yard toss from Hooker to Hyatt, Wright barreled into the north checkerboard from the one-yard-line for his second tally of the night. McGrath booted the extra point to make it 42-0 with 10:15 left in the third.
 
The Zips finally brought their scoring drought to an end with 7:35 remaining in the third period. They marched 58 yards in seven plays, with Noah Perez sending 35-yard field goal through the uprights to make it 42-3 Tennessee.
 
Tennessee countered with two scores, setting off fireworks on long touchdown passes via Joe Milton III at the end of the third period and with 12:16 to go in the final stanza, respectively, to reset the scoreboard to 56-3. Milton found senior wideout Ramel Keyton streaking downfield for a 57-yard scoring strike and fired a laser to sophomore Walker Merrill for a 38-yarder. McGrath hit the first PAT before Toby Wilson added the next.
 
Akron added a 41-yard Perez field goal with 6:22 left to make the score 56-6. UT responded immediately, however, with Tayven Jackson under center. The freshman became the third Vol quarterback to engineer a scoring drive, calling his own number and capping a 12-play, 75-yard drive with a one-yard jaunt around left end for his first career touchdown. Wilson’s PAT made the final score 63-6.

Tennessee will be back at home next Saturday and open SEC play, as it welcomes No. 18/21 Florida (2-1) to Neyland Stadium for a 3:30 p.m. clash on CBS. Tickets for the contest are already sold out.

-UT Athletics

Vols WR Jalin Hyatt / Credit: UT Athletics

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