Quotes/Stats/Notes/Story: No. 24 Vols Knock Off No. 17 Pittsburgh In Overtime Road Win, 34-27

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

PITTSBURGH — Tennessee quarterback Hendon Hooker found Cedric Tillman open in the end zone for a 28-yard touchdown in overtime, and the Big Orange defense came up with a monumental stop as the 24th-ranked Volunteers took down No. 17 Pittsburgh on the road, 34-27, capping a thrilling edition of the Johnny Majors Classic on Saturday at Acrisure Field.

Tennessee (2-0) improves to 14-9 all-time in overtime games, breaking a tie with Arkansas for the most overtime wins in NCAA history. The victory also marked Tennessee’s first road triumph over a top-20 non-conference foe since defeating No. 6 Miami (Fla.), 10-6, on Nov. 8, 2003.

The Vols have produced top-20 road wins in back-to-back seasons after knocking off No. 18 Kentucky, 45-42, last year in Lexington.

With the game knotted at 27-27 at the end of regulation, Pittsburgh (1-1) won the overtime coin toss and deferred. Facing 2nd-and-13 after a holding penalty, Hooker danced around the pocket and fired a dart to Tillman, who stopped on a dime to pull in the game-clinching score. Redshirt senior placekicker Chase McGrath knocked through his fourth PAT of the game to put the Vols ahead 34-27 and one stop away from securing the win.

The Tennessee defense stymied the Panthers in overtime, headlined by a 12-yard sack from super senior safety Trevon Flowers on the game’s final third down. Facing fourth-and-goal from the 20-yard line, Pitt QB Nick Patti’s pass over the middle fell incomplete to solidify the Volunteer victory.

Hooker led the Big Orange aerial attack completing 27-of-42 passes for 325 yards and two touchdowns with no interceptions. The redshirt senior from Greensboro, North Carolina, has a touchdown pass in 14 consecutive games, the second longest streak in program history, and posted the fourth 300-yard passing game of his career.

Tillman led all pass catchers with 162 yards on eight receptions, marking his sixth-career game with more than 100 yards receiving and the second-highest single-game receiving output for the fifth-year senior. Junior wideout Jalin Hyatt had a career-high and game-high 11 receptions for 73 yards, while redshirt junior receiver Bru McCoy pulled in his first touchdown as a Vol and finished the game with four catches for 58 yards.

Sophomore running back Jaylen Wright led the Vols on the ground with nine carries for a team-high 47 yards, while junior Jabari Small took 10 carries for 17 yards, including a pair of one-yard scores for his third-career multi-touchdown performance.

Senior linebacker Aaron Beasley tied his career-high with 14 total tackles to lead all players on Saturday, including a three-yard tackle for loss, his first career pass breakup and a career-high tying three quarterback hurries. Edge rushers Tyler Baron and Byron Young each posted four tackles, two TFLs and one sack, while Baron notched his first-career strip sack and Flowers nabbed his fourth-career interception to complement his heroic sack in overtime. In total, the Big Orange defensive unit posted four sacks and nine TFLs in the road victory.

Pittsburgh saw valiant effort from its leading tailback in Israel Abanikanda, who carried the ball 25 times for 154 yards—including a breakaway 76-yard score in the first quarter. Starting quarterback Kedon Slovis was 14-of-24 for 195 yards, one touchdown and one interception before exiting the game at halftime due to injury. Patti played the entire second half and overtime, completing 9-of-20 passes for 79 yards and a touchdown.

After a Tennessee three-and-out to begin the game, Pitt put together a nine-play, 43-yard drive that the Volunteer defense stalled in the red zone. The Panthers settled for a 30-yard field goal as Ben Sauls’ first boot of the afternoon sailed through the uprights to give Pitt an early 3-0 advantage.

The Vols were unable to gain any offensive momentum on their second drive, going three-and-out for the second-straight possession. Pitt’s lead expanded to double digits on the next offensive play when Abanikanda rushed up the middle and dashed 76 yards to the end zone. Sauls’ point after attempt put the Panthers ahead 10-0 with 9:00 remaining in the first quarter.

The Panthers took aim at a three-possession lead late in the first quarter, but a tipped pass in the back of the end zone fell into the waiting arms of senior defensive back Trevon Flowers—who got his feet down in bounds to force Pitt’s first turnover of the ballgame.

The Vols capitalized on Flowers’ pick with an 11-play, 80-yard touchdown drive to break up the shutout and pull within three points of the Panthers with 1:02 left in the opening stanza. Hooker completed five passes for 64 yards on the series, including a 24-yard connection with tight end Jacob Warren that put the Vols one yard away from the end zone. Small finished it off with his second rushing score in as many games, and McGrath nailed his 145th consecutive PAT to cut the margin to 10-7.

Pitt regained its 10-point lead on the next possession with a 57-yard touchdown catch-and-run down the right sideline to tight end Gavin Bartholomew, who hurdled a Tennessee tackler in the secondary before plodding into the end zone. Sauls was true on the PAT to put the Panthers ahead 17-7 with 13:25 to go in the first half.

The back-and-forth affair continued on the following UT series when the Vols orchestrated a nine-play, 71-yard touchdown drive, capped by McCoy’s first touchdown as a Vol with a 32-yard scoring grab inside the back-left pylon. McGrath’s extra point pulled the Vols within three once again, 17-14, with 10:03 remaining in the second quarter.

Tennessee kept momentum on its side when redshirt junior DB Wesley Walker landed a seven-yard sack on fourth down to force a Pittsburgh turnover on downs inside UT territory. On the very next play, Hooker connected with Tillman down the right sideline on a physical 61-yard reception—carrying a Panther defender on his back 10-plus yards before being dragged down at the half-yard line. Small punched it in for his second touchdown of the afternoon, giving Tennessee its first lead of the game with 4:56 to go in the quarter. McGrath’s third successful PAT made it a 21-17 Big Orange advantage.

In the waning moments of the first half, Tennessee gained another opportunity to score when Baron’s strip sack was recovered by Omari Thomas at the Pittsburgh 28-yard line. After an eight-yard rush by Wright, McGrath stepped in and converted the 37-yard field goal try to put the Vols up by a touchdown, 24-17, as time expired in the second quarter and both teams headed to the locker room.

Both offenses stalled out of halftime as neither team scored in the third quarter. The Panthers had a pair of chances to add points on two field goals, but Sauls pushed attempts from 46 and 36 yards wide left to keep the Tennessee lead at seven.

After recovering a Tennessee fumble late in the third, the Panthers traveled 27 yards in 12 plays to set up another field goal try. Abanikanda toted seven carries for 26 yards on the series before Sauls knocked through a 35-yard boot to cut Tennessee’s advantage to four points, 24-20, with 14:07 left in the fourth quarter.

The Vols responded with a field goal of their own, as McGrath stepped in and nailed a 51-yarder—his longest in a Tennessee uniform and second-longest of his six-year collegiate career—to cap a 15-play, 41-yard series that used 5:10 of game clock. The drive featured a pair of clutch receptions from UT’s veteran wideouts as McCoy and Tillman converted third and fourth downs, respectively, to keep the sequence alive.

Pittsburgh evened the score with 2:23 left in the fourth quarter when Jared Wayne reeled in a four-yard touchdown pass from Patti on fourth-and-goal. The scoring play capped a 10-play, 39-yard drive as the Panthers took advantage of a muffed punt.

The Vols were unable to enter field goal range on their last drive, and Paxton Brooks punted the ball 40 yards to the Pitt 15-yard line with 19 seconds left in regulation. Patti took a knee on the next play to send the game into overtime.

Tennessee returns home next week for a third consecutive non-conference matchup, playing host to the Akron Zips on Saturday, Sept. 17. Kickoff is set for 7 p.m. ET from Neyland Stadium, and the game will be streamed exclusively online via SEC Network+ or ESPN+.

-UT Athletics

Vols WR Cedric Tillman / Credit: UT Athletics

Quotes/Stats/Notes/Story: No. 24 Vols Knock Off No. 17 Pittsburgh In Overtime Road Win, 34-27

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

PITTSBURGH — Tennessee quarterback Hendon Hooker found Cedric Tillman open in the end zone for a 28-yard touchdown in overtime, and the Big Orange defense came up with a monumental stop as the 24th-ranked Volunteers took down No. 17 Pittsburgh on the road, 34-27, capping a thrilling edition of the Johnny Majors Classic on Saturday at Acrisure Field.

Tennessee (2-0) improves to 14-9 all-time in overtime games, breaking a tie with Arkansas for the most overtime wins in NCAA history. The victory also marked Tennessee’s first road triumph over a top-20 non-conference foe since defeating No. 6 Miami (Fla.), 10-6, on Nov. 8, 2003.

The Vols have produced top-20 road wins in back-to-back seasons after knocking off No. 18 Kentucky, 45-42, last year in Lexington.

With the game knotted at 27-27 at the end of regulation, Pittsburgh (1-1) won the overtime coin toss and deferred. Facing 2nd-and-13 after a holding penalty, Hooker danced around the pocket and fired a dart to Tillman, who stopped on a dime to pull in the game-clinching score. Redshirt senior placekicker Chase McGrath knocked through his fourth PAT of the game to put the Vols ahead 34-27 and one stop away from securing the win.

The Tennessee defense stymied the Panthers in overtime, headlined by a 12-yard sack from super senior safety Trevon Flowers on the game’s final third down. Facing fourth-and-goal from the 20-yard line, Pitt QB Nick Patti’s pass over the middle fell incomplete to solidify the Volunteer victory.

Hooker led the Big Orange aerial attack completing 27-of-42 passes for 325 yards and two touchdowns with no interceptions. The redshirt senior from Greensboro, North Carolina, has a touchdown pass in 14 consecutive games, the second longest streak in program history, and posted the fourth 300-yard passing game of his career.

Tillman led all pass catchers with 162 yards on eight receptions, marking his sixth-career game with more than 100 yards receiving and the second-highest single-game receiving output for the fifth-year senior. Junior wideout Jalin Hyatt had a career-high and game-high 11 receptions for 73 yards, while redshirt junior receiver Bru McCoy pulled in his first touchdown as a Vol and finished the game with four catches for 58 yards.

Sophomore running back Jaylen Wright led the Vols on the ground with nine carries for a team-high 47 yards, while junior Jabari Small took 10 carries for 17 yards, including a pair of one-yard scores for his third-career multi-touchdown performance.

Senior linebacker Aaron Beasley tied his career-high with 14 total tackles to lead all players on Saturday, including a three-yard tackle for loss, his first career pass breakup and a career-high tying three quarterback hurries. Edge rushers Tyler Baron and Byron Young each posted four tackles, two TFLs and one sack, while Baron notched his first-career strip sack and Flowers nabbed his fourth-career interception to complement his heroic sack in overtime. In total, the Big Orange defensive unit posted four sacks and nine TFLs in the road victory.

Pittsburgh saw valiant effort from its leading tailback in Israel Abanikanda, who carried the ball 25 times for 154 yards—including a breakaway 76-yard score in the first quarter. Starting quarterback Kedon Slovis was 14-of-24 for 195 yards, one touchdown and one interception before exiting the game at halftime due to injury. Patti played the entire second half and overtime, completing 9-of-20 passes for 79 yards and a touchdown.

After a Tennessee three-and-out to begin the game, Pitt put together a nine-play, 43-yard drive that the Volunteer defense stalled in the red zone. The Panthers settled for a 30-yard field goal as Ben Sauls’ first boot of the afternoon sailed through the uprights to give Pitt an early 3-0 advantage.

The Vols were unable to gain any offensive momentum on their second drive, going three-and-out for the second-straight possession. Pitt’s lead expanded to double digits on the next offensive play when Abanikanda rushed up the middle and dashed 76 yards to the end zone. Sauls’ point after attempt put the Panthers ahead 10-0 with 9:00 remaining in the first quarter.

The Panthers took aim at a three-possession lead late in the first quarter, but a tipped pass in the back of the end zone fell into the waiting arms of senior defensive back Trevon Flowers—who got his feet down in bounds to force Pitt’s first turnover of the ballgame.

The Vols capitalized on Flowers’ pick with an 11-play, 80-yard touchdown drive to break up the shutout and pull within three points of the Panthers with 1:02 left in the opening stanza. Hooker completed five passes for 64 yards on the series, including a 24-yard connection with tight end Jacob Warren that put the Vols one yard away from the end zone. Small finished it off with his second rushing score in as many games, and McGrath nailed his 145th consecutive PAT to cut the margin to 10-7.

Pitt regained its 10-point lead on the next possession with a 57-yard touchdown catch-and-run down the right sideline to tight end Gavin Bartholomew, who hurdled a Tennessee tackler in the secondary before plodding into the end zone. Sauls was true on the PAT to put the Panthers ahead 17-7 with 13:25 to go in the first half.

The back-and-forth affair continued on the following UT series when the Vols orchestrated a nine-play, 71-yard touchdown drive, capped by McCoy’s first touchdown as a Vol with a 32-yard scoring grab inside the back-left pylon. McGrath’s extra point pulled the Vols within three once again, 17-14, with 10:03 remaining in the second quarter.

Tennessee kept momentum on its side when redshirt junior DB Wesley Walker landed a seven-yard sack on fourth down to force a Pittsburgh turnover on downs inside UT territory. On the very next play, Hooker connected with Tillman down the right sideline on a physical 61-yard reception—carrying a Panther defender on his back 10-plus yards before being dragged down at the half-yard line. Small punched it in for his second touchdown of the afternoon, giving Tennessee its first lead of the game with 4:56 to go in the quarter. McGrath’s third successful PAT made it a 21-17 Big Orange advantage.

In the waning moments of the first half, Tennessee gained another opportunity to score when Baron’s strip sack was recovered by Omari Thomas at the Pittsburgh 28-yard line. After an eight-yard rush by Wright, McGrath stepped in and converted the 37-yard field goal try to put the Vols up by a touchdown, 24-17, as time expired in the second quarter and both teams headed to the locker room.

Both offenses stalled out of halftime as neither team scored in the third quarter. The Panthers had a pair of chances to add points on two field goals, but Sauls pushed attempts from 46 and 36 yards wide left to keep the Tennessee lead at seven.

After recovering a Tennessee fumble late in the third, the Panthers traveled 27 yards in 12 plays to set up another field goal try. Abanikanda toted seven carries for 26 yards on the series before Sauls knocked through a 35-yard boot to cut Tennessee’s advantage to four points, 24-20, with 14:07 left in the fourth quarter.

The Vols responded with a field goal of their own, as McGrath stepped in and nailed a 51-yarder—his longest in a Tennessee uniform and second-longest of his six-year collegiate career—to cap a 15-play, 41-yard series that used 5:10 of game clock. The drive featured a pair of clutch receptions from UT’s veteran wideouts as McCoy and Tillman converted third and fourth downs, respectively, to keep the sequence alive.

Pittsburgh evened the score with 2:23 left in the fourth quarter when Jared Wayne reeled in a four-yard touchdown pass from Patti on fourth-and-goal. The scoring play capped a 10-play, 39-yard drive as the Panthers took advantage of a muffed punt.

The Vols were unable to enter field goal range on their last drive, and Paxton Brooks punted the ball 40 yards to the Pitt 15-yard line with 19 seconds left in regulation. Patti took a knee on the next play to send the game into overtime.

Tennessee returns home next week for a third consecutive non-conference matchup, playing host to the Akron Zips on Saturday, Sept. 17. Kickoff is set for 7 p.m. ET from Neyland Stadium, and the game will be streamed exclusively online via SEC Network+ or ESPN+.

-UT Athletics

Vols WR Cedric Tillman / Credit: UT Athletics

WATCH: Heupel on the defense after UT win over Pitt “2nd, 3rd & 4th quarter that’s as good a performance as I’ve been around in a long time”

Tennessee head football coach Josh Heupel spoke in the postgame after the No. 24 Volunteers won at the No. 17 Pittsburgh Panthers, 34-27 in overtime. UT moves to 2-0 and will host Akron next Saturday.

KNOXVILLE, TN – September 10, 2022 – The Tennessee Volunteers during the game between the Pittsburgh Panthers and the Tennessee Volunteers at Acrisure Stadium in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Andrew Ferguson/Tennessee Athletics

Week 2 SEC Score Picks: Vols at Pitt, SEC matchups begin

By Vince Ferrara / @VinceSports

Here’s a look at my Week 2 SEC football game predictions, both straight-up and versus the point spread.

Check back on my “Vince’s View” blog page for future posts including weekly SEC football and NFL game predictions. Bookmark my blog page and check back often.

2022 Week 1 Straight-Up Record: 12-2 (86%)
2022 Week 1 Spread Record: 9-5 (64%)
2022 Season Straight-Up Record: 13-2 (87%)
2022 Season Spread Record: 10-5 (67%)
2021 Season Straight-Up Record: 92-34 (73%)
2021 Season Spread Record: 63-63 (50%)

CONFERENCE PLAY BEGINS IN THE SEC

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10
#1 Alabama (1-0, 0-0 SEC) at Texas (1-0)
Series: UT leads, 7-1-1
Noon ET • FOX
Austin, Texas • DKR Texas Memorial Stadium (100,119)
SiriusXM: 81
Line: Alabama -21
Vince’s Pick vs. Spread: Alabama -21
Score Prediction: Alabama 35 Texas 10

South Carolina (1-0, 0-0 SEC) at #16 Arkansas (1-0, 0-0 SEC)
Series: UA leads, 13-10
Noon ET • ESPN
Last: SC, 48-22 (2017 at Columbia)
Fayetteville, Ark. • Reynolds Razorback Stadium (76,000)
SiriusXM: 121/202 – 138/190
Line: Arkansas -9.5
Vince’s Pick vs. Spread: Arkansas -9.5
Score Prediction: Arkansas 27 South Carolina 17

Missouri (1-0, 0-0 SEC) at Kansas State (1-0)
Series: MIZ leads, 60-32-5
Noon ET • ESPN2
Manhattan, Kan. • Bill Snyder Family Stadium (50,000)
SiriusXM: 98/192
Line: Kansas State -7.5
Vince’s Pick vs. Spread: Missouri +7.5
Score Prediction: Kansas State 28 Missouri 27

#23 Wake Forest (1-0) at Vanderbilt (2-0, 0-0 SEC)
Series: VU leads, 10-6
Noon ET • SEC Network
Nashville, Tenn. • FirstBank Stadium (40,350)
SiriusXM: 158/191
Line: Wake Forest -13.5
Vince’s Pick vs. Spread: Vanderbilt +13.5
Score Prediction: Wake Forest 31 Vanderbilt 24

Appalachian State (0-1) at #6 Texas A&M (1-0, 0-0 SEC)
Series: First Meeting
3:30pm ET • ESPN2
Bryan-College Station, Texas • Kyle Field (102,733)
SiriusXM: 98/192
Line: Texas A&M -18
Vince’s Pick vs. Spread: Texas A&M -18
Score Prediction: Texas A&M 42 Appalachian State 14

#24 Tennessee (1-0, 0-0 SEC) at #17 Pittsburgh (1-0)
Series: Pitt leads, 3-0
3:30pm ET • ABC
Pittsburgh, Pa. • Acrisure Stadium (68,400)
SiriusXM: 138/190
Line: Tennessee -5.5
Vince’s Pick vs. Spread: Tennessee -5.5
Score Prediction: Tennessee 38 Pittsburgh 30

Samford (1-0) at #2 Georgia (1-0, 0-0 SEC)
Series: UGA leads, 1-0
4pm ET • SEC Network
Athens, Ga. • Dooley Field at Sanford Stadium (92,746)
SiriusXM: 158/191
Line: Georgia -54.5
Vince’s Pick vs. Spread: Samford +54.5
Score Prediction: Georgia 52 Samford 0

Central Arkansas (0-1) at #22 Ole Miss (1-0, 0-0 SEC)
Series: Tied, 0-0 (first game vacated)
7pm ET • SECN+, ESPN+
Oxford, Miss. • Vaught-Hemingway Stadium (64,038)
SiriusXM: 98/192
Line: Ole Miss -36
Vince’s Pick vs. Spread: Ole Miss -36
Score Prediction: Ole Miss 56 Central Arkansas 7

#20 Kentucky (1-0, 0-0 SEC ) at #12 Florida (1-0, 0-0 SEC)
Series: UF leads, 53-19
7pm ET • ESPN
Last: UK, 20-13 (2021 at Lexington)
Gainesville, Fla. • Ben Hill Griffin Stadium (88.548)
SiriusXM: 138/190 – 81
Line: Florida -6
Vince’s Pick vs. Spread: Kentucky +6
Score Prediction: Florida 27 Kentucky 24

San Jose State (1-0) at Auburn (1-0, 0-0 SEC)
Series: AU leads, 2-0
7:30pm ET • ESPNU
Auburn, Ala. • Jordan-Hare Stadium (87,451)
SiriusXM: 158/191
Line: Auburn -24
Vince’s Pick vs. Spread: Auburn -24
Score Prediction: Auburn 35 San Jose State 10

Southern (1-0) at LSU (0-1, 0-0 SEC)
Series: First Meeting
7:30pm ET • SEC Network
Baton Rouge, La. • Tiger Stadium (102,321)
SiriusXM: 121/202
Line: LSU -44.5
Vince’s Pick vs. Spread: Southern +44.5
Score Prediction: LSU 38 Southern 3

Mississippi State (1-0, 0-0 SEC) at Arizona (1-0)
Series: First Meeting
11pm ET • FS1
Tucson, Ariz. • Arizona Stadium (57,400)
SiriusXM: 138/190
Line: Miss State -10.5
Vince’s Pick vs. Spread: Miss State -10.5
Score Prediction: Miss State 37 Arizona 23

Check back for my blog posts, Vince’s View,” here.

Find more of my broadcasting work at VinceSports.net.

KNOXVILLE, TN – September 01, 2022 – fb during the game between the Ball State Cardinals and the Tennessee Volunteers at Neyland Stadium in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Andrew Ferguson/Tennessee Athletics

Football Preview: #24 Vols Head North for Ranked Battle with #17 Pitt in Johnny Majors Classic

PITTSBURGH, Pa. – After a dominating win over Ball State in the season opener, the newly ranked Tennessee Volunteers will face their first road test of the year on Saturday afternoon against No. 17/14 Pittsburgh at Acrisure Stadium.

Saturday’s contest will mark the second the edition of the Johnny Majors Classic, as the 24th ranked Vols will look to avenge a narrow loss in last season’s tilt between the two teams in Knoxville. It will be the first time the Big Orange have ever played a game in the state of Pennsylvania.

BROADCAST INFO

Saturday’s showdown of ranked teams will be televised nationally on ABC with Sean McDonough (PxP), Todd Blackledge (analyst) and Molly McGrath (sideline) on the call. Kickoff is slated for 3:30 p.m. ET.

Fans can listen to Tennessee’s official radio broadcast on the Vol Network (Local: WIVK-FM 107.7/WNML-FM 99.1) over 64 stations across the state of Tennessee and the southeast, UTsports.com, the Tennessee Athletics App, SiriusXM (Sirius Ch. 138, XM Ch. 190, Internet Ch. 961) and the Varsity App. A live audio stream of the broadcast will also be available on UTSports.com​ and the Official Gameday App.

Bob Kesling (PxP), Pat Ryan (analyst) and Brent Hubbs (analyst) will call the action, with Kasey Funderburg handling sideline duties. The Big Orange Countdown pregame show begins at 1:30 p.m. ET.

GAMEDAY INFO

For the most up-to-date information on this Saturday’s gameday policies, please visit the Pitt Football Gameday Information page.

Tickets
Tickets for Saturday’s contest can be purchased through Vivid Seats by click HERE.

NEED TO KNOW

Johnny Majors Classic, Part II
When Tennessee and Pitt meet on Saturday, they will pay tribute to a shared gridiron icon as the game’s designation for the second straight year is the Johnny Majors Classic, named in honor of the late legendary head coach and player. The two teams honored Majors last season in a game that Pitt won 41-34 on Sept. 11 in Knoxville.

Majors served two tenures as head coach at Pitt, doing so from 1973-76 and 1993-96. He spent 16 seasons as head coach of his alma mater of Tennessee from 1977-92. In total, he produced a 185-137-10 record in 29 seasons of coaching. Saturday marks the Volunteers’ first appearance on ABC since a 45-24 win over Virginia Tech in the Battle at Bristol on Sept. 10, 2016.

45 Streak
The Vols have tied a school record for consecutive games scoring 45 or more points with four, which matches the 1993 team who did it in the final four contests of the regular season. UT has combined for 209 points and is 3-1 during this streak: (59-10 Ball State, 45-48 Purdue, 45-21 Vanderbilt, 60-14 South Alabama). In 14 games in the Heupel era, the Vols are averaging 40.7 points per game.

Hendo Cinco
Tennessee redshirt senior quarterback Hendon Hooker picked up right where he left off in 2021 with a solid all-around showing in the Vols’ 59-10 season-opening victory over Ball State. Hooker completed 18-of-25 passes for 221 yards and two touchdowns and added two more scores on the ground. With a touchdown pass to Jalin Hyatt on UT’s first offensive play, Hooker extended his stretch of consecutive games with a touchdown pass to 13, which is the second-longest streak in program history behind Heath Shuler’s 18-game streak.
 
Battle of Ranked Foes
Tennessee made its debut in the Associated Press Top 25 this week at No. 24, representing its first ranking in the Josh Heupel era and first in the AP poll since Oct. 11, 2020, during the COVID-shortened season when it was No. 11. Heupel’s UCF teams were ranked a total of 27 weeks in his three seasons in Orlando. Their highest ranking in the Heupel era was No. 7 when it played in the 2018 AAC Championship Game and then the Fiesta Bowl.

Pitt enters the contest No. 17 in the AP Top 25 and No. 14 in the Coaches Poll. This is the highest ranked non-conference road matchup (non-neutral) for the Vols since they traveled to No. 4 Oklahoma (L, 34-10) on Sept. 13, 2014. The Vols already hold one road win over a top-20 team in the Heupel era as it defeated No. 18/17 Kentucky, 45-42, last season in Lexington. The last time UT beat a top-20 non-conference team on the road (non-neutral site) was on Nov. 8, 2003, when the Big Orange took down No. 6 Miami, 10-6, in the Orange Bowl. That was also the last time UT faced an ACC team on the road.

SERIES HISTORY

Pitt leads, 3-0
Tennessee will be looking to notch its first win over  Pittsburgh in program history after dropping the previous three contests, all of which were played in Knoxville. The Vols came close to downing the Panthers last season, but their fourth-quarter comeback came up just short in a 41-34 loss.

ABOUT PITTSBURGH

The Panthers are led by eighth-year head coach Pat Narduzzi, who guided the program to 11 wins and its first ACC title in program history in 2021.

Offensively, Pitt is led by USC transfer quarterback Kedon Slovis, who completed 16-of-24 passes for 308 yards and a touchdown in the Panthers’ season-opening 38-31 win over rival West Virginia. Four players had multiple receptions in the season opener, led by Konata Mumpfield’s five catches for 71 yards. Rodney Hammond Jr. was Pitt’s leading rusher against the Mountaineers, finishing with 74 yards and two touchdowns on 16 carries.

The Panthers feature an experienced and talented defensive front which racked up five sacks in last week’s opener, including a pair from defensive end Habakkuk Baldonado. Senior linebacker Sirvocea Dennis led the team with 10 tackles while redshirt junior defensive back M.J. Devonshire had a 56-yard pick six in the fourth quarter that proved to the be the game-winning score.

-UT Athletics

Tennessee Volunteers / Credit: UT Athletics

Football Preview: #24 Vols Head North for Ranked Battle with #17 Pitt in Johnny Majors Classic

PITTSBURGH, Pa. – After a dominating win over Ball State in the season opener, the newly ranked Tennessee Volunteers will face their first road test of the year on Saturday afternoon against No. 17/14 Pittsburgh at Acrisure Stadium.

Saturday’s contest will mark the second the edition of the Johnny Majors Classic, as the 24th ranked Vols will look to avenge a narrow loss in last season’s tilt between the two teams in Knoxville. It will be the first time the Big Orange have ever played a game in the state of Pennsylvania.

BROADCAST INFO

Saturday’s showdown of ranked teams will be televised nationally on ABC with Sean McDonough (PxP), Todd Blackledge (analyst) and Molly McGrath (sideline) on the call. Kickoff is slated for 3:30 p.m. ET.

Fans can listen to Tennessee’s official radio broadcast on the Vol Network (Local: WIVK-FM 107.7/WNML-FM 99.1) over 64 stations across the state of Tennessee and the southeast, UTsports.com, the Tennessee Athletics App, SiriusXM (Sirius Ch. 138, XM Ch. 190, Internet Ch. 961) and the Varsity App. A live audio stream of the broadcast will also be available on UTSports.com​ and the Official Gameday App.

Bob Kesling (PxP), Pat Ryan (analyst) and Brent Hubbs (analyst) will call the action, with Kasey Funderburg handling sideline duties. The Big Orange Countdown pregame show begins at 1:30 p.m. ET.

GAMEDAY INFO

For the most up-to-date information on this Saturday’s gameday policies, please visit the Pitt Football Gameday Information page.

Tickets
Tickets for Saturday’s contest can be purchased through Vivid Seats by click HERE.

NEED TO KNOW

Johnny Majors Classic, Part II
When Tennessee and Pitt meet on Saturday, they will pay tribute to a shared gridiron icon as the game’s designation for the second straight year is the Johnny Majors Classic, named in honor of the late legendary head coach and player. The two teams honored Majors last season in a game that Pitt won 41-34 on Sept. 11 in Knoxville.

Majors served two tenures as head coach at Pitt, doing so from 1973-76 and 1993-96. He spent 16 seasons as head coach of his alma mater of Tennessee from 1977-92. In total, he produced a 185-137-10 record in 29 seasons of coaching. Saturday marks the Volunteers’ first appearance on ABC since a 45-24 win over Virginia Tech in the Battle at Bristol on Sept. 10, 2016.

45 Streak
The Vols have tied a school record for consecutive games scoring 45 or more points with four, which matches the 1993 team who did it in the final four contests of the regular season. UT has combined for 209 points and is 3-1 during this streak: (59-10 Ball State, 45-48 Purdue, 45-21 Vanderbilt, 60-14 South Alabama). In 14 games in the Heupel era, the Vols are averaging 40.7 points per game.

Hendo Cinco
Tennessee redshirt senior quarterback Hendon Hooker picked up right where he left off in 2021 with a solid all-around showing in the Vols’ 59-10 season-opening victory over Ball State. Hooker completed 18-of-25 passes for 221 yards and two touchdowns and added two more scores on the ground. With a touchdown pass to Jalin Hyatt on UT’s first offensive play, Hooker extended his stretch of consecutive games with a touchdown pass to 13, which is the second-longest streak in program history behind Heath Shuler’s 18-game streak.
 
Battle of Ranked Foes
Tennessee made its debut in the Associated Press Top 25 this week at No. 24, representing its first ranking in the Josh Heupel era and first in the AP poll since Oct. 11, 2020, during the COVID-shortened season when it was No. 11. Heupel’s UCF teams were ranked a total of 27 weeks in his three seasons in Orlando. Their highest ranking in the Heupel era was No. 7 when it played in the 2018 AAC Championship Game and then the Fiesta Bowl.

Pitt enters the contest No. 17 in the AP Top 25 and No. 14 in the Coaches Poll. This is the highest ranked non-conference road matchup (non-neutral) for the Vols since they traveled to No. 4 Oklahoma (L, 34-10) on Sept. 13, 2014. The Vols already hold one road win over a top-20 team in the Heupel era as it defeated No. 18/17 Kentucky, 45-42, last season in Lexington. The last time UT beat a top-20 non-conference team on the road (non-neutral site) was on Nov. 8, 2003, when the Big Orange took down No. 6 Miami, 10-6, in the Orange Bowl. That was also the last time UT faced an ACC team on the road.

SERIES HISTORY

Pitt leads, 3-0
Tennessee will be looking to notch its first win over  Pittsburgh in program history after dropping the previous three contests, all of which were played in Knoxville. The Vols came close to downing the Panthers last season, but their fourth-quarter comeback came up just short in a 41-34 loss.

ABOUT PITTSBURGH

The Panthers are led by eighth-year head coach Pat Narduzzi, who guided the program to 11 wins and its first ACC title in program history in 2021.

Offensively, Pitt is led by USC transfer quarterback Kedon Slovis, who completed 16-of-24 passes for 308 yards and a touchdown in the Panthers’ season-opening 38-31 win over rival West Virginia. Four players had multiple receptions in the season opener, led by Konata Mumpfield’s five catches for 71 yards. Rodney Hammond Jr. was Pitt’s leading rusher against the Mountaineers, finishing with 74 yards and two touchdowns on 16 carries.

The Panthers feature an experienced and talented defensive front which racked up five sacks in last week’s opener, including a pair from defensive end Habakkuk Baldonado. Senior linebacker Sirvocea Dennis led the team with 10 tackles while redshirt junior defensive back M.J. Devonshire had a 56-yard pick six in the fourth quarter that proved to the be the game-winning score.

-UT Athletics

Tennessee Volunteers / Credit: UT Athletics

Quotes: Vols Progressing Toward Week Two Matchup At Pitt

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Two days out from the first road test of 2022, Tennessee football head coach Josh Heupel met with members of the media Thursday afternoon to wrap up availabilities for the week. The 24th-ranked Vols are deep into game prep for Saturday’s matchup at No. 17 Pittsburgh, which stands as the first ranked-on-ranked contest of the Heupel era.
 
Coming off a methodical 59-10 victory over Ball State to open the campaign, Heupel spoke to the progress a program can make from week-to-week early in the season.

“You can make your biggest jump from week one to week two. You should make huge jumps in communication or understanding expectations. Your young players that are in your program for the first time, from the leadup to kickoff, to what it feels like and looks like during the course of the game. As a staff, you continue to get in sync and work through some of those issues. It should be a week where you gain a bunch, but you can gain a bunch at any point during the season, too.
 
“Our work habits and our preparation have been really solid this week. We have to finish it the right way. We understand what we’re getting into. This is a really good football team. They’re tough, they’re physical, they’re smart, they’re mature. We have to go, not do anything extraordinary, but do the ordinary things at a really high level.”

The programs enter the second meeting of the Johnny Majors Classic with a bit of familiarity. Saturday’s matchup with Pitt will be Heupel’s fourth time facing the Panthers in the last five seasons as a head coach.
 
“There is familiarity on both sides of it for both programs. It gives you some understanding of the personnel as much as anything. Schematically, things are going to subtly change on both sides of the line of scrimmage, and that has played out in the previous three contests. Being able to adjust during the course of the ball game based on the differences that you are seeing will be ultra-important in this one too.”
 
After a Friday walkthrough, Tennessee will board the plane for Pittsburgh and gear up for a nationally televised non-conference bout with the Panthers. The game kicks off at 3:30 p.m. ET Saturday on ABC.
 
Heupel’s full transcript from Thursday’s press conference can be found below.

Tennessee Football Press Conference | Sept. 8, 2022
 
Head Coach Josh Heupel

Opening statement…
“Good day of preparation here for us. Excited to get on the plane tomorrow and go play a really good football team. It’s been a good week of preparation.”
 
On if it is true or coach speak that teams make their biggest jumps from week one to week two…
“A little bit of both. You can make your biggest jump from week one to week two. You should make huge jumps just in communication, understanding expectations, your young players that are in your program for the first time from the leadup to kickoff to what it feels like and looks like during the course of the game. As a staff, you continue to get in sync and work through some of those issues. It should be a week where you gain a bunch, but you can gain a bunch at any point during the season, too. Our work habits and our preparation have been really solid this week. We got to finish it the right way. We understand what we are getting into. This is a really good football team. They’re tough, they’re physical, they’re smart, they’re mature. We got to go not do anything extraordinary but do the ordinary things at a really high level.”
 
On the veteran leaders being locked in for this week…
“They understand the type of fight that it’s going to take during the course of the 60 minutes of play to win this football game. They understand this is a really good team that’s really mature. Is it something completely different as far as the way they approached last week? No. The more mature your football team is, they become really consistent in their preparation. It’s been a really good week in the meeting rooms to on the practice field. Our twos and threes being dialed in during our walkthroughs and making sure they’re getting every mental rep as well. Continue that preparation until kickoff, then you got to tee it up and go play.”
 
On what goes into calling the first 10-15 plays of the game…
“For us, ways that you feel like you can attack them based on what you’re going to see. For us to able put our personnel in a position to be successful, that’s from the offensive line to the skill guys, and certainly the quarterback as well. Our kids having an understanding in those first couple of drives – here’s some thoughts that we are planning on getting to based on what we anticipate seeing, and them having a great understanding of how to react to the different variables that they could potentially see during the course of those first couple of drives.”
 
On how Pitt’s defense makes it difficult on opposing offenses to run the ball…
“First of all, their personnel is big, long, athletic and physical, and I’m just talking front seven. I don’t care what formation you’re in, they’re going to load the box on you. That can be pre-snap, but on the snap as well. Those conflict players are tight and that’s why you got to strain. There’s a big difference early in a football game between a five-yard run and a two-yard run, and a lot of little things go into that. You’ve got to win 1-on-1s on the outside during the course of this football game, too, and that dictates how the game unfolds but certainly how you play in third-down situations. This a really good team in third-and-long and we have to try to stay in more manageable third downs against them.”
 
On how confident he is in his receivers in 1-on-1 situations with Cedric Tillman and Bru McCoy
“We trust both of those guys. They are big, strong and physical, and play that way as well. It’ll be different than it was last week for those guys though. You’re going to see a bunch of press-man out on the outside and you got to be able to get off of their jam technique. You got to be comfortable with the body in your hip or on top of you the entire day and be ready to go make those competitive plays. But we do trust both of those guys.”
 
On advantages of having played Pitt in four out of the last five years…
“There is familiarity on both sides of it for both programs. It gives you some understanding of the personnel I think as much as anything. Schematically, things are going to subtly change on both sides of the line of scrimmage, and that has played out in the previous three contests. Being able to adjust during the course of the ball game based on the differences that you are seeing will be ultra-important in this one too.” 
 
On players using last year’s game vs. Pitt as motivation for this season…  
“Whatever gets them in the building and watching more tape, I’m all for it. Last year’s game has nothing to do with how this week plays out. The first play doesn’t dictate what happens on the second play of the game, either. Certainly, there is a sense of urgency and understanding of what we’re getting into, and I think that has led to a really good week, up until this point, of preparation.” 
 
On slowing the tempo down offensively on third downs…  
“Even when we play with our tempo, we are making sure that we’re getting things in the right direction. If you don’t, you have no opportunity to execute the way that you need to. For us, handling our tempo offensively will be a big part of this one. We’ve played them three previous times, and we are going to have to play in both situations, where the clock is stopped or after a penalty or stoppage in play and handle those situations really well, and we have got to be able to execute within our tempo, too.” 
 
On the trust factor between Hendon Hooker and the coaches in the game planning process…
“I think the longer you’re with a quarterback and the more understanding of what you’re trying to do and why you’re trying to attack a defense that way, there is more trust from him too. If there’s something new that’s going into the game plan, he can understand the reason why behind it and probably feels more comfortable then he necessarily would when he is young inside of your offense. So, I think it is a two-way street. For us offensively, from coach (Alex) Golesh to Glen Elarbee to our entire offensive staff, coach (Joey) Halzle – I think we have a much better understanding then we did a year ago at this time (in) who is our personal, what can they execute and how do we put them into a position to be successful?”
 
On if the offensive and defensive lines know the challenge they face against Pitt…
“They understand the challenge that we’re up against on both side of the line of scrimmage.”

-UT Athletics

Vols HC Josh Heupel / Credit: UT Athletics
Jimmy’s blog: Run game will be key in 2nd Johnny Majors Classic

Jimmy’s blog: Run game will be key in 2nd Johnny Majors Classic

 By Jimmy Hyams

As Tennessee prepares to play at Pitt on Saturday (3:30 pm) here are a few keys for both teams.

Tennessee had no sacks against Ball State

Ball State threw the ball quickly to offset any potential pass rush.

But concerning was the fact many times the Cardinals’ primary receiver was open, allowing the QB to throw on time.

If UT’s defensive backs don’t cover Pitt’s wideouts more tightly, don’t expect much of a rush from the Vols – or many sacks.

On the flip side, West Virginia recorded five sacks against Pitt. Panthers coach Pat Narduzzi said some were the result of the quarterback and receivers not being on the same page.

Another factor: UT’s defense was pretty vanilla against Ball State. Look for more stunts and blitzes against the Panthers.

Can Tennessee run the ball on Pitt?

Pitt was ranked among the nation’s top 10 front sevens by one scouting service.

Yet, West Virginia ran for 190 yards (213 not counting QB sacks) without the threat of a running quarterback. The Mountaineers freshman running back C.J Donaldson ran for 125 yards on just 7 carries with a long of 44.

Tennessee ran for 218 yards against Ball State.

Last year against Pitt, the Vols ran for 136 yards on 33 carries while still adjusting to its uptempo offense. But the Vols top two running backs against Pitt (Jabari Small and Jaylen Wright) combined for 33 yards on 19 carries. That won’t be good enough this time around.

With Hendon Hooker’s running ability and the one-two punch of Small and Wright, UT needs to rush for 200 yards against a Pitt defense that has several linemen banged up.

Pitt didn’t run the ball well against West Virginia

The preseason book on Pitt was that the Panthers would line up with their five returning starters on the offensive line and pound the ball with a trio of running backs.

That didn’t work against West Virginia. Pitt rushed 39 times for 76 yards (1.9 yards per carry). Excluding QB sacks or runs, Pitt had 32 carries for 96 yards, which still isn’t impressive.

Rodney Hamond was the top running back with 16 carries for 74 yards and two touchdowns and 55 yards on two receptions.

Last year, Pitt managed just 96 yards on 45 attempts against UT. QB Kenney Pickett had just 19 yards on 10 tries.

Pitt should easily crack the 100-yard mark against UT but the Vols need to keep that number to less than 150. Otherwise, QB Kedon Slovis could flourish in the play-action game.

Slovis averaged 19.3 yards per completion.

Slovis, the USC transfer, completed 18 of 24 passes for 308 yards against West Virginia.

That 19.3 yards per completion stat is eye-popping.

While Pitt lost Biletnikoff winner Jordan Addison (transfer to USC) it still has Jared Wayne and Akron transfer Konata Mumpfield, who combined for eight catches for 160 yards in the opener.

UT played soft coverage against Ball State, determined not to allow any explosive passes.

Will that strategy work against Pitt? Or will Pitt repeatedly thrown quick, underneath routes or hitches to move the chains and force the Vols to play tighter coverage?

Should Pitt be the underdog?

Pitt won the ACC last year, beat Tennessee in Neyland Stadium, and is ranked No. 17 – seven spots higher than Tennessee.

Yet, the Vols are a 6.5-point favorite on the road.

That doesn’t sit well with Pitt and Narduzzi.

Narduzzi said based on what you read all summer, college football is comprised of the SEC and the Big 10 while the ACC is a “pee-wee league.’’

Narduzzi said he will mention the odds to his team.

“I like being the underdog,’’ Narduzzi said. “I will share it (with the team).’’

Prediction: Tennessee 37-34

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