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By Vince Ferrara / @VinceSports
Here’s an updated list of University of Tennessee players in the National Football League as the 2022 season begins.
You’ll also see a list of players that were once at UT as well as other Knoxville area players that played at other schools.
I’ve included depth chart listings from either the team’s “unofficial” depth chart or Ourlads’ reported depth charts.
That’s all below now, and will be updated often, here on my blog “Vince’s View.”
Transactions (since 9/1)
*VFL DB Justin Coleman resigned by Seahawks (9/1)
*VFL DB Micah Abernathy signed to practice squad by Packers (9/2)
*One-time Vols WR Preston Williams signed to practice squad by Panthers (9/5)
*One-time Vols WR Brandon Johnson waived from IR by Broncos (9/6)
*One-time Vols QB Jarrett Guarantano signed to practice squad by Cardinals (9/7)
Notes
*There are 28 VFLs in the NFL
*5 of those VFLs are on practice squads
*1 VFL is on IR
*17 of 32 teams have a VFL on their rosters
*10 VFLs are listed as starters on their depth charts
*Once again, the Saints have the most VFLs on active rosters with 4
*There are 6 ex-Vols that finished college at others schools currently with NFL teams
*There are 9 Knoxville-area players that did not attend UT currently with NFL teams
Tennessee Volunteers In The NFL as of 9/8/22 (28)
x = rookie
AFC East (0)
NONE – Buffalo Bills, Miami Dolphins, New England Patriots, New York Jets
AFC North (5)
OT – Ja’Wuan James (71) Baltimore Ravens (2nd team LT)
*OL/DL – Kahlil McKenzie (Practice Squad) Baltimore Ravens
QB – Joshua Dobbs (15) Cleveland Browns (2nd team QB)
*RB – John Kelly (Practice Squad) Cleveland Browns
DB – Cameron Sutton (20) Pittsburgh Steelers (Starting RCB)
NONE – Cincinnati Bengals
AFC South (3)
LB – Jalen Reeves-Maybin (34) Houston Texans (3rd team WLB)
LS – Morgan Cox (46) Tennessee Titans (LS)
*DB – Theo Jackson (Practice Squad) Tennessee Titans-x
NONE – Indianapolis Colts, Jacksonville Jaguars
AFC West (6)
OL – Trey Smith (65) Kansas City Chiefs (Starting RG)
FB – Jakob Johnson (45) Las Vegas Raiders (FB)
DT – Kendal Vickers (95) Las Vegas Raiders (2nd team DT)
DL – Matthew Butler (73) Las Vegas Raiders-x (2nd team DT)
WR – Joshua Palmer (5) Los Angeles Chargers (Starting WR)
*OLB/DE – Jonathan Kongbo (Practice Squad) Denver Broncos
NONE
NFC East (1)
DE – Derek Barnett (96) Philadelphia Eagles (2nd team RDE)
NONE – Dallas Cowboys, New York Giants, Washington Commanders
NFC North (2)
WR – Velus Jones Jr. (12) Chicago Bears-x (Starting Slot WR/Starting PR/2nd team KR)
*DB – Micah Abernathy (Practice Squad) Green Bay Packers
NONE – Detroit Lions, Minnesota Vikings
NFC South (7)
WR – Cordarrelle Patterson (84) Atlanta Falcons (Starting RB)
OL – Cade Mays (64) Carolina Panthers-x (2nd team RG)
RB – Alvin Kamara (41) New Orleans Saints (Starting RB)
DT – Shy Tuttle (99) New Orleans Saints (Starting LDT)
WR – Marquez Callaway (1) New Orleans Saints (2nd team WR/PR/KR))
CB – Alontae Taylor (27) New Orleans Saints-x (2nd team RCB)
*TE – Ethan Wolf (Injured Reserve) New Orleans Saints
NONE – Tampa Bay Buccaneers
NFC West (4)
CB – Emmanuel Moseley (4) San Francisco 49ers (Starting LCB)
WR – Jauan Jennings (15) San Francisco 49ers (Starting WR)
DE – Darrell Taylor (52) Seattle Seahawks (Starting WLB)
DB – Justin Coleman (28) Seattle Seahawks (3rd team LCB)
NONE – Arizona Cardinals, Los Angeles Rams
One-Time Vols That Transferred To Other Schools On NFL Rosters (6)
P – Tommy Townsend (5) Kansas City Chiefs (U. of Tennessee/Florida) (P)
RB – Ty Chandler (32) Minnesota Vikings (U. of Tennessee/North Carolina)-x (4th team RB/3rd team KR)
*QB – Nathan Peterman (Practice Squad) Chicago Bears (U. of Tennessee/Pitt)
*WR – Preston Williams (Practice Squad) Carolina Panthers (U. of Tennessee/Colorado St)
*QB – Jarrett Guarantano (Practice Squad) Arizona Cardinals (U. of Tennessee/Washington)-x
*TE – Eli Wolf (Injured Reserve) Washington Commanders (U. of Tennessee/Georgia)
Active Knoxville Area Players That Didn’t Play At UT on NFL Rosters (9)
WR – Tee Higgins (85) Cincinnati Bengals (Oak Ridge HS/Clemson) (Starting WR)
LB – Devin Harper (50) Dallas Cowboys (Karns HS/Oklahoma St.)-x (3rd team MLB)
WR – Randall Cobb (18) Green Bay Packers (Alcoa HS/Kentucky) (Starting Slot WR)
WR – Amari Rodgers (8) Green Bay Packers (Catholic HS/Clemson) (2nd team Slot WR/Starting PR/Starting KR)
QB – Trevor Lawrence (16) Jacksonville Jaguars (Born in Knoxville, did not go to HS locally/Clemson) (Starting QB)
OL – Darian Kinnard (75) Kansas City Chiefs (Grew up in Knoxville, did not go to HS locally/Kentucky)-x (2nd team RT)
S – Harrison Smith (22) Minnesota Vikings (Catholic HS/Notre Dame) (Starting SS)
OG – Cole Strange (69) New England Patriots (Farragut HS/Chattanooga)-x (Starting LG)
*OG – Nate Gilliam (Practice Squad) Cincinnati Bengals (Farragut HS/Wake Forest)
Check back for updates as roster moves are made.
Find more of my broadcasting work at VinceSports.net
Tennessee head coach Josh Heupel spoke to the media for the final time this game week before the Vols play at Pittsburgh this Saturday.
By Jimmy Hyams
A national championship football coach, an SEC championship coach, a coach who helped Tennessee win a national championship and eight current Vols will be among the array of star-studded speakers at the Knoxville Quarterback Club this fall.
Ed Orgeron, who led LSU to the 2019 national title, Mark Richt, who guided Georgia to two SEC crowns, and David Cutcliffe, the offensive coordinator on Tennessee’s 1998 national championship team, will address the QB Club at Calhoun’s on the River.
The eight current Vols include Byron Young, Jaylen McCullough, Trevon Flowers, Aaron Beasley, Jerome Carvin, Javontez Spraggins, Teyvon Jackson and Navy Shuler.
Tennessee coach Josh Heupel will be the initial speaker Sept. 12.
Tennessee coaches Rick Barnes and Tony Vitello are also on tab, as well as CBS’ Rick Neuheisel, ESPN’s Gene Wojciechowski, and the winners of the Neyland Award (Dick Sheridan) and Lindsey Nelson Awards (Eli Gold).
Also, the QB Club will honor UT’s Yesterday’s Heros.
Meetings are each Monday at 11:30 am. Membership costs $250 for the year, $200 for senior citizens.
To join call 865-719-0465 or go to Knoxvillequarterbackclub.com.
Here is the QB Club lineup:
Sept. 12: UT coach Josh Heupel
Sept. 19, Navy Shuler, Teyvon Jackson
Sept. 26: Dick Sheridan, Eli Gold, Jerome Carvin, Javontez Spraggins
Oct. 3: former LSU coach Ed Orgeron
Oct. 10: Byron Young, Jaylen McCullough, Trevon Flowers, Aaron Beasley
Oct. 17: Former UT assistant David Cutcliffe
Oct. 24: Former Georgia coach Mark Richt
Oct. 31: UT basketball coach Rick Barnes
Nov. 7: UT baseball coach Tony Vitello
Nov. 14: CBS’ Rick Neuheisel
Nov. 21: ESPN’s Gene Wojciechowski
YESTERDAY’S HEROS
Sept. 12: Honor deceased Vol players since last year
Sept. 19: RB Curt Watson. 1969-1971
Sept. 26: RB Don McLeary. 1968-1970
Oct. 3: RB Jay Graham. 1993-1996
Oct. 10: QB Randy Sanders. 1985-1988
Oct. 17: LB Steve Kiner. 1967-1969
Oct. 24: DE Carl Johnson. 1970-1972
Oct. 31: DB Mike Mauck. 1974-1976
Nov. 7: OL Lee North. 1978-1981
Nov. 14: OL Bill Mayo. 1981-1984
Nov. 21: TBA
Sponsored by Big Kahuna Wings: The wings that changed it all
The Southeastern Conference released dates for each school’s 18 league games for the 2022-23 season Wednesday.
The conference office previously announced each school’s home and away opponents for this coming season in June. Times and television information for the 2022-23 regular-season SEC schedule will be released at a later date.
Tennessee’s 18-game SEC slate begins with a road trip to Ole Miss on Wednesday, Dec. 28—marking the Vols’ earliest start date to SEC play since the 1989-90 season.
Following the conference season opener, Tennessee gets a six-day break before the SEC home opener against Mississippi State on Tuesday, Jan. 3.
Other notable home conference showdowns include matchups with Kentucky (Saturday, Jan. 14), Auburn (Saturday, Feb. 4), Alabama (Wednesday, Feb. 15) and Arkansas (Tuesday, Feb. 28).
Games against Vanderbilt (Tuesday, Jan. 10), Georgia (Wednesday, Jan. 25), Missouri (Saturday, Feb. 11) and South Carolina (Saturday, Feb. 25) round out Tennessee’s home schedule.
Tennessee’s notable road conference games include a trip to Florida (Wednesday, Feb. 1), at Kentucky (Saturday, Feb. 18), at Texas A&M (Tuesday, Feb. 21), and the regular-season finale at Auburn (Saturday, March 4).
The Vols’ SEC road schedule also includes games at South Carolina (Saturday, Jan. 7), at Mississippi State (Tuesday, Jan. 17), at LSU (Saturday, Jan. 21) and at Vanderbilt (Wednesday, Feb. 8).
The SEC Tournament returns to Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena in 2023, taking place Wednesday, March 8 through Sunday, March 12.
Over the summer, Tennessee announced its 2022-23 non-conference slate—highlighted by a trip to the Battle 4 Atlantis in November, neutral-site games against Colorado (Nashville) and Maryland (Brooklyn), a road contest against Arizona and a home matchup with Texas in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge.
Coming off last season’s SEC Tournament title, the Vols have added a highly-rated crop of newcomers to an experienced core consisting of 2022 first-team All-SEC selection Santiago Vescovi, Josiah-Jordan James, Olivier Nkamhoua and Uros Plavsic.
Fans interested in being a part of the action at Thompson-Boling Arena next season are encouraged to click HERE.
2022-23 Tennessee Men’s Basketball SEC Schedule
Wednesday Dec. 28 at Ole Miss
Tuesday Jan. 3 Mississippi State
Saturday Jan. 7 at South Carolina
Tuesday Jan. 10 Vanderbilt
Saturday Jan. 14 Kentucky
Tuesday Jan. 17 at Mississippi State
Saturday Jan. 21 at LSU
Wednesday Jan. 25 Georgia
Wednesday Feb. 1 at Florida
Saturday Feb. 4 Auburn
Wednesday Feb. 8 at Vanderbilt
Saturday Feb. 11 Missouri
Wednesday Feb. 15 Alabama
Saturday Feb. 18 at Kentucky
Tuesday Feb. 21 at Texas A&M
Saturday Feb. 25 South Carolina
Tuesday Feb. 28 Arkansas
Saturday March 4 at Auburn
-UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – After its 59-10 season-opening victory against Ball State, Tennessee football comes in at No. 24 in this week’s Associated Press Top 25 poll released on Tuesday. The Volunteers were also receiving votes in the USA TODAY Coaches’ Poll for the second consecutive rankings release.
The Big Orange opened the second year of the Josh Heupel era in dominant fashion with a wire-to-wire win over Ball State on Thursday, Sept. 1. The Vols eclipsed the 45-point mark for the fourth straight game, matching a school record set over the final four games of the 1993 regular season.
Redshirt senior quarterback Hendon Hooker threw for two touchdowns and rushed for two more scores, finishing 18-of-25 with 221 yards through the air. Tennessee churned out 218 yards on the ground with five rushing scores, including the first career touchdown for true freshman running back Dylan Sampson.
The Volunteer defense was led by senior corner back Warren Burrell, sophomore corner Christian Charles and senior linebacker Aaron Beasley with eight tackles each. UT also got interceptions from Tamarion McDonald and cornerback Kamal Hadden, with each leading directly to touchdowns in the first and second quarters, respectively.
Tennessee makes an appearance in the AP Top 25 for the first time since Oct. 4, 2020. The Vols were receiving votes in the organization’s preseason poll released in early August.
Tennessee visits No. 17/14 Pittsburgh for the second meeting of the Johnny Majors Classic on Saturday. The ranked non-conference matchup is slated for a 3:30 p.m. kickoff and will be televised nationally on ABC.
Vols in the Polls
Preseason: RV AP, RV Coaches
Sept. 6: 24 AP, RV Coaches
Associated Press Top 25
1. Alabama (44)
2. Georgia (17)
3. Ohio State (2)
4. Michigan
5. Clemson
6. Texas A&M
7. Oklahoma
8. Notre Dame
9. Baylor
10. USC
11. Oklahoma State
12. Florida
13. Utah
14. Michigan State
15. Miami (FL)
16. Arkansas
17. Pittsburgh
18. NC State
19. Wisconsin
20. Kentucky
21. BYU
22. Ole Miss
23. Wake Forest
24. Tennessee
25. Houston
Others receiving votes: Oregon, Penn State, Texas, Cincinnati, Florida State, Fresno State, UCF, Minnesota, Kansas State, Auburn, Mississippi State, Air Force, Oregon State, North Carolina, South Carolina, Purdue, UCLA, Arizona
USA TODAY Coaches Poll
1. Alabama (57)
2. Georgia (6)
3. Ohio State (2)
4. Clemson
5. Michigan
6. Texas A&M
7. Oklahoma
8. Baylor
9. Notre Dame
10. Oklahoma State
11. Michigan State
12. USC
13. NC State
14. Pittsburgh
15. Utah
16. Miami (FL)
17. Arkansas
18. Wisconsin
19. Florida
20. Kentucky
21. Wake Forest
22. Texas
23. Ole Miss
24. Oregon
25. BYU
Others receiving votes: Tennessee, Penn State, Houston, Cincinnati, Iowa, Mississippi State, Florida State, Central Florida, Fresno State, Air Force, Auburn, Texas Christian, UCLA, South Carolina, Utah State, Minnesota, Syracuse, Oregon State, UL Lafayette, Texas Tech, Northwestern, North Carolina.
-UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – After its 59-10 season-opening victory against Ball State, Tennessee football comes in at No. 24 in this week’s Associated Press Top 25 poll released on Tuesday. The Volunteers were also receiving votes in the USA TODAY Coaches’ Poll for the second consecutive rankings release.
The Big Orange opened the second year of the Josh Heupel era in dominant fashion with a wire-to-wire win over Ball State on Thursday, Sept. 1. The Vols eclipsed the 45-point mark for the fourth straight game, matching a school record set over the final four games of the 1993 regular season.
Redshirt senior quarterback Hendon Hooker threw for two touchdowns and rushed for two more scores, finishing 18-of-25 with 221 yards through the air. Tennessee churned out 218 yards on the ground with five rushing scores, including the first career touchdown for true freshman running back Dylan Sampson.
The Volunteer defense was led by senior corner back Warren Burrell, sophomore corner Christian Charles and senior linebacker Aaron Beasley with eight tackles each. UT also got interceptions from Tamarion McDonald and cornerback Kamal Hadden, with each leading directly to touchdowns in the first and second quarters, respectively.
Tennessee makes an appearance in the AP Top 25 for the first time since Oct. 4, 2020. The Vols were receiving votes in the organization’s preseason poll released in early August.
Tennessee visits No. 17/14 Pittsburgh for the second meeting of the Johnny Majors Classic on Saturday. The ranked non-conference matchup is slated for a 3:30 p.m. kickoff and will be televised nationally on ABC.
Vols in the Polls
Preseason: RV AP, RV Coaches
Sept. 6: 24 AP, RV Coaches
Associated Press Top 25
1. Alabama (44)
2. Georgia (17)
3. Ohio State (2)
4. Michigan
5. Clemson
6. Texas A&M
7. Oklahoma
8. Notre Dame
9. Baylor
10. USC
11. Oklahoma State
12. Florida
13. Utah
14. Michigan State
15. Miami (FL)
16. Arkansas
17. Pittsburgh
18. NC State
19. Wisconsin
20. Kentucky
21. BYU
22. Ole Miss
23. Wake Forest
24. Tennessee
25. Houston
Others receiving votes: Oregon, Penn State, Texas, Cincinnati, Florida State, Fresno State, UCF, Minnesota, Kansas State, Auburn, Mississippi State, Air Force, Oregon State, North Carolina, South Carolina, Purdue, UCLA, Arizona
USA TODAY Coaches Poll
1. Alabama (57)
2. Georgia (6)
3. Ohio State (2)
4. Clemson
5. Michigan
6. Texas A&M
7. Oklahoma
8. Baylor
9. Notre Dame
10. Oklahoma State
11. Michigan State
12. USC
13. NC State
14. Pittsburgh
15. Utah
16. Miami (FL)
17. Arkansas
18. Wisconsin
19. Florida
20. Kentucky
21. Wake Forest
22. Texas
23. Ole Miss
24. Oregon
25. BYU
Others receiving votes: Tennessee, Penn State, Houston, Cincinnati, Iowa, Mississippi State, Florida State, Central Florida, Fresno State, Air Force, Auburn, Texas Christian, UCLA, South Carolina, Utah State, Minnesota, Syracuse, Oregon State, UL Lafayette, Texas Tech, Northwestern, North Carolina.
-UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – With a road battle on the horizon and a fresh AP Poll signaling a matchup between ranked foes, the 24th-ranked Tennessee Volunteers completed their Tuesday practice at Haslam Field in preparation for No. 17 Pitt. A pair of coaches took the podium following practice in defense coordinator Tim Banks and quarterbacks coach Joey Halzle.
Halzle had lots of praise for redshirt-senior quarterback Hendon Hooker in both his understanding of the system and his ability to read keys and execute when the lights shine brightest.
“He’s at the point right now the way he’s playing, you got an open book with him, you feel comfortable. He’ll operate anything you put him out there (in),” Halzle said. “We have that kind of bond and rapport now where we can call anything. He trusts us that what we’re putting in the game makes sense and then if it doesn’t work for either one, we can pull it, which makes it on our end a lot easier to game plan on the front end.”
Ball State was a building block, a litmus test of sorts, with the defensive game plan on dropping eight and forcing the Big Orange to find the holes and take advantage. As the 59 points showcase, that test was passed with flying colors.
“Whenever people are playing the drop eight stuff, it’s a good lesson in having to shop windows, to work bodies, there’s just bodies everywhere,” Halzle continued. “You got to feel space, that’s what we’re all based on is feeling space anyway. It’s a good thing for him (Hooker) to see that early in the year because someone else is going to try it at some point … You can’t get bored with your team’s success. You got to keep taking what’s there and keep pushing it aggressively down the field.”
The defense also displayed its prowess, not allowing a Cardinal score until the middle of the third quarter. That development and growth was something coach Banks mentioned all of fall camp, but his side is still evolving, even after a strong start.
“We showed some flashes in terms of what we want to be and what we’re capable of being,” Banks said. “(Ball State) did a good of getting rid of the ball quickly, but when (the quarterback) held it, I thought we applied some pressure. Was it perfect? Absolutely not. But I thought for the most part, those guys did a good job of executing what we asked them to execute.”
The lopsided score line also allowed some younger guys to see meaningful action and that experience may hold great value for the Vols as the year progresses and the defensive snap counts climb.
“We tried to rotate guys early, not just at the end of the game,” Banks added. “Particularly on the back end, that has not necessarily been a thing that we did in the past. You saw Wesley Walker out there a ton, and we obviously played a ton of corners. We tried to get guys up front in terms of the rotation, as well, early. We felt like we got guys in the game early enough that they felt like there were some real meaningful minutes they were contributing to.”
The Vols will return to the practice field tomorrow as preparations for the Panthers continue.
Full transcripts from both coaches, along with quotes from DL/LB Tyler Baron, DB Jaylen McCollough and OL Cooper Mays can be found below.
On how the defensive line played Thursday night…
“For the most part, we showed some flashes in terms of what we want to be and what we’re capable of being. Those guys (Ball State) did a good of getting rid of the ball quickly, but when (the quarterback) held it, I thought we applied some pressure. Was it perfect? Absolutely not. But I thought for the most part, those guys did a good job of executing what we asked them to execute. To answer your question, I felt fine coming out of the game in terms of what was out there and the opportunities we had.”
On tweaking the defensive scheme against Pitt…
“In reality, we obviously want to sack them. We want to get as many takeaways as we can. But I think the most important thing is to win. At the end of the day, we felt like we had enough mechanisms in our toolbox to be able to get the win, and obviously, that’s what we did.”
On what Tennessee can expect from the Pitt offense…
“They’re an experienced group up front. They’re big. A lot of guys have played a lot of football. They do a good job of putting four hands on guys and moving guys off their spot. 77 (Carter Warren), the left tackle, is extremely athletic and has done a really good job in the past of protecting the quarterback. We have a lot of respect for those guys up front and their program as a whole, so we know we’ll have our hands full.”
On Tamarion McDonald’s performance on Thursday…
“I thought he did a good job. For the most part, he was very consistent with what we asked him to do. From man coverage, he graded out somewhere around 80 percent. In zone principles, his eyes were in the right places – getting the interception early – I thought he did a really good job considering that was only the second start of his whole career. We’re pleased so far with what he’s brought to the table.”
On how Kamal Hadden has grown and how he played on Thursday…
“I think Kamal is really coming along. He’s a kid that hasn’t played a ton of football – obviously (played) at the junior college and he was banged up a little bit last year – but we like the direction that he’s headed. He’s maturing, understanding the whole complexity of our defense and where he needs to be. He’s always been a tremendous athlete. Now, it’s just understanding the finer details. He’s worked really, really hard for that during the offseason, and you guys started to see a little bit of a glimpse of that Thursday night.”
On if they were able to play more bodies Thursday…
“We tried to rotate guys early, not just at the end of the game. Particularly on the back end, that has not necessarily been a thing that we did in the past. You saw Wesley Walker out there a ton, and we obviously played a ton of corners. We tried to get guys up front in terms of the rotation as well early. Even the linebacker position where we’re a little bit limited going into the game. We felt good. We felt like we got guys in the game early enough that they felt like there were some real meaningful minutes they were contributing to.”
On Warren Burrell and Christian Charles…
“With Charles, you could see that was his first time out on an island. Once he started to settle down within the game, I thought he started to play better. He’s a tremendous athlete as we’ve already documented, but playing corner is new for him. He’s getting better. By the end of the game, I thought he was really comfortable with what we were asking him to do. It was a little bit uneventful for Burrell. He did exactly what he needed to do. (Ball State) only challenged him a few times, and he was up for the challenge most of those reps. We feel like Burrell had a really good camp, we thought he did his job Thursday night, and he’ll obviously have even bigger shoes to fill, or to play at, going into this next venue. I know he’s excited about the challenge, and so are we.”
On Elijah Herring and Joshua Josephs…
“They look like freshmen, but they’re uber-talented, very athletic. Joshua Josephs is a kid that’s long, athletic and probably plays a little bit bigger than what his actual size is. I thought he did some good things, but when they’re freshman, there’s going to be some things that we have to correct. Only experience can teach them, so to speak. I thought being able to get those guys some first-game reps will only bode well for us moving forward.”
On Aaron Beasley’s growth…
“Obviously, we didn’t know a lot about (Aaron) Beasley last year, and he ended up starting a bunch of games for us and had a tremendous spring. He was good. He’s always very consistent. We know exactly what we’re going to get out of him. He doesn’t say a whole bunch, but at the end of the day, I know guys on our defense respect him, his work ethic and how consistent he is day-in and day-out. I thought he did a good job of flying around, hitting the ball and being active in coverage. He affected the quarterback on the very first play that led to an interception. He’s a guy that we know we can count on. We are happy we have him.”
On how Elijah Herring and Joshua Josephs earned early playing time…
“I think with (Elijah) Herring, he made tremendous strides coming out of spring. He’s a big kid, strong and physical. He’s still learning the nuances of playing inside linebacker, but he worked hard enough and showed enough consistency in practice where we felt like we needed to carve out a role for him. We don’t see that changing as we continue to move forward. (Joshua) Josephs is a kid that plays a little bit bigger than what his actual size is. He’s uber-long. He has some explosive qualities. Again, the consistency. The stage has not seemed too big for those guys during practice. As we continue to go throughout the season, we think being able to plays those guys early and getting them more reps will only help us coming down the stretch of the season.”
On tackling and physicality…
“I think the physicality was good. I didn’t have a problem with how physical we tried to play. We are never as happy as we want to be after a game. Did we tackle at 100 percent? No, so we’re disappointed that way. Did we tackle well enough to win? I think so. We didn’t look out there and say, ‘We are a bad tackling team,’ coming out of the first game. To think that we have arrived, I would not say that either. I think the more you play and tackle the better we’ll get, and I don’t think we’re any different. We’ll continue to get better at tackling, but I was not disappointed coming out of the game in terms of our tackling.”
On third down defense…
“The numbers said we graded out on third down. There are some things we want to do better in terms of how we affect the quarterback, whether it’s pressure or rotation in the coverage packages. Overall, I thought we did well enough to win.”
On Pittsburgh having a new offensive coordinator and quarterback…
“They do have a new offensive coordinator. That’s always a little bit tricky, because you’re studying another opponent to get ready for them and you watch the one-game sample. We talk about it all the time, you always expect the unexpected. We have to lean on our training. I think Coach Narduzzi has been there long enough where those guys have a culture. I think they have some core values that they believe in, and I don’t think this offensive coordinator will deviate away from that. These guys want to be able to run the football, protect the quarterback and throw the ball down the field. We’re excited about the opportunity. We have a tremendous amount of respect for their program. We’re excited to get down there and get to it.”
On Hendon Hooker’s growth since the Pitt game last year…
“Similar to what we talked about at the beginning of fall camp, Hendon is a completely different guy. His confidence, his fundamentals, his development since that point, he’s a completely different quarterback. From mental side, physical side, the entire aspect of playing the position, and that’s why you’ve seen the success and the growth kind of using that game as a jumping up point from last year.”
On his assessment of Joe Milton III’s performance vs. Ball State…
“He played extremely well. Hate to use the word flawless but he played at an extremely high level out there. It gave us a bunch of confidence. Today, with the transfer portal and all that, it’s hard to have two high-level quarterbacks and Joe showed us that we have two very good options at quarterback, and we have a ton of confidence playing him.”
On what impresses him most about Pitt’s defense…
“Extremely aggressive in the way that they play. They’re sound. They play within their scheme at a very high level, but within that they play extremely aggressively every single snap and extremely physical. You’re going to have to show up and take everything that you get with this one.”
On how much more they can do offensively this year due to Hendon Hooker’s understanding of the system…
“Yeah, with Hendon, he’s at the point right now the way he’s playing, you got an open book with him, you feel comfortable. He’ll operate anything you put him out there (in), and the other thing is what we’ve talked about on his confidence side of it – he will now let us know, if he’s like ‘hey, I’m not comfortable with that, I don’t like that’ – and we know if he’s saying that, it’s gone. He’s not just saying it because he’s uncomfortable or he’s worried about it. He’s like, ‘nah, I don’t like this, it doesn’t fit. I don’t like how it’s timing up.’ Cool, it’s out. So, we have that kind of bond and rapport now where we can call anything. He trusts us that what we’re putting in the game makes sense and then if it doesn’t work for either one, we can pull it, which makes it on our end a lot easier to game plan on the front end.”
On Hooker having to come in last year’s game off the bench and how the play calling changed…
“The conversation with him was just like, ‘hey man, you know whenever you’re the backup quarterback, I experienced the same thing, you’re always one play away. We knew this was a chance, here’s what we’re doing, here’s what we’re seeing, go take it.’ We didn’t have a separate game plan between him and Joe (Milton). We had what we had, and we called it, and were basing on the looks we were seeing. That part, there wasn’t much of a difference, and it was just really the conversation, you can’t make it too big of a deal. This is always an opportunity in football that this could happen. Here it happened and go play.”
On Hendon Hooker’s rhythm in the season opener being a little off…
“I’m guessing you’re talking about the couple of high balls that he went early? It was just a couple of mechanical things. His base got wide and he caught his toe cleat a couple of times and sailed it. Usually stems from the first game of the season, trying to play maybe a little too fast. Try to get the ball out on the edge, right now. Calm it down and we actually worked on it during the couple off days and then he’s out there on the field today and he was ripping it all over the field. It wasn’t uncommon, it was just something that we had to see, correct and move on.”
On the importance of the run game when going against a physical and aggressive defense like Pitt…
“The way they’re designed is they’re designed to stop the run. That’s what they pride themselves on. With everything you do running the ball against them, they try to make it tough sledding. You can’t turn it into an air raid game and just drop back and throw it 50 times. But they are going to put everybody in the box and try to stuff the run game and force you to do it. So, we have to have a good scheme, and then really just, you’ve got to move bodies up front. It is what it is. It’s still what this game comes down to is blocking and tackling. (If) we do that at a high level, we should be successful.”
On the mindset of being the backup quarterback…
“It’s a tough spot to be in because you have to prepare as the starter with a quarter of the reps that the starter is getting, as it should be. He’s the one that’s taking the field, he’s got to get the most. He’s (Joe Milton III) done a really good job of making sure that he is mentally focused every single time we take the field. He goes through his calls, he makes every call even when he is not in the game, so he’s really embraced that, OK, I understand because it happened to him the other way of how quickly this can switch, so he is always ready to go. That’s why I said on the front end, we feel confident rolling him. We do not have a separate (game plan), if Joe’s in, it’s this, if Hendon’s in, it’s this. If for whatever reason he’s in there, you’re calling it and you’re rolling. And that’s what he’s earned in the way he has prepared.”
On his assessment of the other quarterbacks that played Thursday night…
“With the young guy Tayven (Jackson) going in there, the main thing is it’s tough going in there in that situation. Just trying to operate under the lights, you want to call everything the correct way, stay in your reads the correct way, and there’s always the freshman hiccups which are in there. What I like about Tayven is that his best practices in fall camp were in Neyland Stadium. He went out there and the moment wasn’t too big for him. He’s the gamer, that’s the type of guy he is, that’s what I liked about him in the recruiting process. You saw that on Thursday night as well. Gaston (Moore) and Navy (Shuler) went in (and) we had the fumbled exchange with Navy in there on the snap, but we saw what it was, corrected that. All those guys had a great camp. The guys that were here had a great spring and we trusted them to go play. It wasn’t just like throwing a dog a bone. We trusted those guys to go play because they know our offense, they’re dialed into what we’re doing, and they went in and played pretty well.”
On how comfortable it is to have Joe Milton III and Hendon Hooker and their good dynamic…
“It’s extremely comfortable. Joe and Hendon are really good friends, like legitimately off the field extremely close friends. They’re happy for each other when they’re doing well. You don’t have Joe in there saying, ‘ah man, I would’ve made that throw.’ If you don’t have Hendon in there when Joe does something well saying like, ‘ ah man, I hope they don’t (play him more).’ There’s none of that. Hendon is our starting quarterback. He’s our guy right now. Joe is extremely happy for all the success that he has and whenever Joe is in the game, Hendon is extremely happy for all the success that Joe has. And that is a culture that coach Heupel has tried to cultivate from the day we got there in the entire locker room, and it’s absolutely permeated down into the quarterback room, as well.”
On Ball State sitting back and not allowing Tennessee to score quickly…
“Whenever people are playing the drop eight stuff, it’s a good lesson in having to shop windows, to work bodies, there’s just bodies everywhere. You got to feel space, that’s what we’re all based on is feeling space anyway. So, it’s a good thing for him (Hendon Hooker) to see that early in the year because someone else is going to try it at some point – don’t know who it’s going to be but it’s going to show up again. With that said, we’re still going to attack, we’re still going to dictate the way the game is played on our side of the ball, regardless of the style of the defense. They were playing soft, it’s like cool, we’re not going to do anything that’s foolish and just try to launch it down the middle of the field. They were giving us the short stuff and we were taking that thing all night. Whenever they’re giving it to you, you just keep taking it and move on down the road. Eventually, you get somebody in a 1-on-1 situation like what happened in the fourth quarter, and we hit Jimmy (Holiday) on the dig rolling in there and he’s goes and gets off the field. You still have all the same opportunities, it’s just him understanding the type of game it’s going to be. You can’t get bored with your team’s success. You got to keep taking what’s there and keep pushing it aggressively down the field.”
On if the game plans are any different for Hendon Hooker and Joe Milton III…
“Not really. We’re rolling out there with what we’ve got. We are really confident in the plan, and it stems back from the first question about what you have with him (Hendon Hooker)? We’re wide open with him, and we feel like Joe (Milton III) can operate in the same way, so we’re not having to say, ‘this guy can do this, but he can’t do that, so if he’s in we can’t call this but if this guy’s in, we can call this.’ There’s none of that going on. We’re calling it and we’re playing it because we have confidence in both those guys to take over.”
On facing Pittsburgh’s new quarterback Kedon Slovis…
“Both of those guys, (Kenny) Pickett and (Kedon) Slovis, are great pocket passers and they like to put the ball on their receivers and let them run. As far as the safety position, we are going to have to have great eye discipline looking at our keys and just trusting what we say. I would say our eye discipline will have to be on point.”
On what to expect against Pittsburgh…
“We know that they will try to attack in some of the ways that they were successful with last year. We come to work every day and trust our preparation and what the coaches are telling us. We will go in and be ready to play. They will have some wrinkles, and so will we, but we will be ready to play.”
On Kamal Hadden and Tamarion McDonald’s success against Ball State…
“Those two guys work hard. They are always in practice making those plays, so when they came into the game, it was not a surprise. I was proud of those guys and the way they executed. They took advantage of the opportunity when it came.”
On Ball State getting the ball out quickly to eliminate Tennessee’s pass rush…
“It’s tedious going against a team that has a scheme trying to get the ball out and run a lot of screens. We have to keep rushing. The breaks are going to come sooner or later, so we need to keep doing our thing and keep working on ourselves.”
On the defensive line’s ability to fight off cut blocks…
“We definitely have to be a lot better at handling cut blocks. Just being able to ricochet and getting back down the line to make plays on the sidelines. We need to take a step there, but it’s a tough deal so we just have to keep working on that.”
On Pitt having lots of senior experience and team chemistry…
“Just like us, they are a very experienced group. They are really well coached and play very physical. They are going to do a lot of different things, such as bring an extra tackle or two into the game. We are going to have to line down and play physical. We will have to play vertical and not as much east and west.”
On Pittsburgh’s defensive front…
“I am really impressed on where they are at. We kind of expected that they create disruption. That is their biggest thing. They have got a lot of guys that maybe aren’t as big as we are used to but they are difference makers. They create a lot of chaos in the backfield and try to get up field vertically and kind of take your space. They are really athletic and make plays with their athleticism and that is what gives people struggles.”
On how motivated he is this for this year’s matchup after missing last season’s Pitt game with an injury…
“I am really excited. It is going to be really good test for us. Like I said, they are a pretty athletic group and I kind of pride myself on being pretty athletic too. So, I am excited to see the challenge. They have a lot of good guys.”
On finding comfort when playing on the road…
“I’m very prepared. I finished out the year with a lot of away games last year in some pretty big environments. I played against Florida, Alabama and Kentucky on the road, and some pretty hard games. I think we are prepared.”
-UT Athletics
ROSTER BREAKDOWN
The Vols’ 2022-23 roster features 18 players (12 scholarship student-athletes) representing six states as well as Finland, Serbia and Uruguay.
There are five Vols who hail from the state of Tennessee, three from South Carolina, two from New York, two from North Carolina and one each from California and Texas. UT has one graduate student, five seniors, one junior, four sophomores and six freshmen.
Tennessee’s 12 scholarship players combine to boast 503 games played (41.9 per man) and 295 starts (24.6 per man). Removing freshmen from that group boosts those averages to 62.9 games played and 36.9 starts per man.
TENNESSEE LEADS SEC IN TOTAL CONFERENCE WINS OVER LAST FIVE SEASONS
Tennessee has captured 69 total wins over SEC opponents (regular season and SEC Tournament) over the last five seasons—more than any other program in the conference.
Kentucky ranks second with 67 total SEC wins, while Auburn ranks third with 62.
During that same time frame, the Vols have also been the most successful league school in the SEC Tournament, recording a conference-best eight SEC Tournament wins
Only Auburn (122) has more overall victories than Tennessee (119) in the last five seasons.
VOLUNTEERS RIDING 17-GAME HOME WIN STREAK
For the fourth time since the venue opened prior to the 1987-88 season, Tennessee posted an undefeated record at Thompson-Boling Arena last season, going 16-0.
The Vols also won their final home game of the 2020-21 campaign, meaning that Tennessee enters this season riding an active 17-game home win streak (tied for seventh-longest active streak in the country).
Last season’s perfect record at home included five wins over top-15 teams, including three top-10 opponents—No. 14 Arkansas, No. 13 LSU, No. 6 Arizona, No. 4 Kentucky and No. 3 Auburn. Tennessee was one of only five major-conference programs to post a perfect record at home last season, joining Arizona, Auburn, Kentucky and Texas Tech.
For each of the last three full-capacity seasons, Tennessee has finished in the top five nationally in average home attendance. The Vols drew an average of 18,202 fans to 16 games at Thompson-Boling Arena last season—fifth-most in the country.
The Vols have ranked among the top 20 in average home attendance for 17 consecutive years (no attendance rankings were compiled in 2020-21), including 10 seasons ranked in the top five nationally.
The Vols’ 2022-23 home slate features five games against 2022 NCAA Tournament teams (Kentucky, Texas, Auburn, Alabama and Arkansas).
VOLS RETURN LARGE CHUNK OF LAST SEASON’S SCORING
Tennessee returns 58.3 percent of last season’s scoring—a mark that ranks second in the SEC behind only Georgia.
Three of the top four scorers from last season highlight the Vols’ returners. Santiago Vescovi is the leading returning scorer after averaging 13.3 points per game a year ago, followed by Josiah-Jordan James (10.3 ppg) and Zakai Zeigler (8.8 ppg).
The backcourt trio of Vescovi, James and Zeigler each saw elevated scoring totals in SEC play last season—Vescovi posted 14.3 points per game, James tallied 10.3 and Zeigler recorded 10.1.
A 2022 All-SEC first team selection, Vescovi became just the second Vol in program history (Chris Lofton) to make 100 or more 3-pointers in a season. He finished with 102 total made 3-pointers, made multiple threes in 30 of Tennessee’s 35 games and registered double figure scoring outputs in 28 of 35 games.
James was especially efficient during the second half of the season. After averaging 6.8 points per game during his first 16 games compared to 13.7 during his final 16 games.
Zeigler’s scoring production also saw an increase as the season progressed—he scored in double figures during 13 of Tennessee’s final 17 games and averaged 10.9 points per game during that span, up from a 6.8 points per game average during the first 18 games.
VESCOVI, JAMES APPROACHING 1,000-POINT MILESTONE
Tennessee’s two most experienced returners with 84 and 81 career games played, respectively, Josiah-Jordan James and Santiago Vescovi both enter the 2022-23 season nearing the 1,000-point mark.
Vescovi enters the season 96 points shy of reaching the 1,000-point mark for his career, while James needs just 271 points to reach 1,000. A total of 53 Vols have scored at least 1,000 points during their time on Rocky Top—six of which have reached the mark during the Rick Barnes era (Jordan Bowden, Robert Hubbs III, John Fulkerson, Admiral Schofield, Lamonte Turner, Grant Williams).
Vescovi has averaged 11.2 points per game during his Tennessee career, while James has averaged 8.7 points.
ZEIGLER BACK FOR YEAR TWO
The final addition to last year’s Tennessee’s roster (signing on Aug. 27, 2021), Zakai Zeigler made a major impact for the Vols as an unheralded true freshman—ranking second on the team in steals (1.7 spg), third in assists (2.7 apg) and fourth in scoring (8.8 ppg).
An eventual 2022 SEC All-Defensive Team and SEC All-Freshman Team selection, Zeigler averaged 10.1 points per game in conference play, while his .866 free-throw percentage during SEC play led the team.
Zeigler finished the regular season just one steal shy of the SEC lead in steals during conference play, averaging 2.2 takeaways per game with 40 steals in 18 SEC games. Additionally, the Long Island, New York, native ranked 11th among all Division I players in steal percentage, logging a steal on 4.54 percent of opponents’ possessions when he was on the floor.
Growing into a sparkplug role over the course of the season, Zeigler was the first player off the bench in a team-high 19 games.
VOLS’ RECRUITING CLASS BRINGS IN FOUR SCHOLARSHIP FRESHMEN
Four scholarship freshmen make up Tennessee’s 2022 recruiting class, highlighted by five-star forward and McDonald’s All-American Julian Phillips.
Guards B.J. Edwards and D.J. Jefferson and forward Tobe Awaka round out the class. While Edwards signed with the Vols in November 2021, Jefferson and Phillips didn’t sign until May, while Awaka officially joined the team in July.
Phillips, a consensus top-20 prospect in the nation from Blytheville, South Carolina, is the seventh five-star prospect to sign with the Vols during the Rick Barnes era. Phillips graduated from Link Academy in Brandon, Missouri—who he helped lead to the championship game at the GEICO National Championships and a No. 3 final ranking in the USA Today Super 25.
Edwards, a graduate of Knoxville Catholic High School, led the Fighting Irish to three state tournament appearances and the 2020 Division II-AA state championship.
Named 2021 TSSAA Division II-AA Mr. Basketball, Edwards scored 2,240 total points in four seasons as a starter at Catholic—averaging 19.3 points, 7.1 rebounds, 5.0 assists and 2.5 steals per game while shooting 52 percent from the field.
Jefferson hails from Richardson, Texas, but graduated from Minnesota Preparatory Academy in St. Paul, Minnesota. Jefferson averaged 16.1 points, 5.8 rebounds, 4.1 assists and 3.0 steals per game as a senior and initially signed with Tulsa in November of 2021 but was released and reopened his recruitment following a coaching change following the 2021-22 season.
He then saw his recruiting stock skyrocket after a standout showing at the Iverson Classic in Memphis in April of 2022.
Named the 2022 New York Gatorade Player of the Year, Awaka graduated from Cardinal Hayes High School in the Bronx. As a senior in 2021-22, he averaged 19.2 points and 13.9 rebounds per game.
Awaka also played AAU ball with the New York Lightning program in the EYBL—the same AAU program that current Vol Zakai Zeigler competed for.
PHILLIPS CONTINUES TENNESSEE’S STREAK OF McDONALD’S ALL-AMERICANS
Tennessee senior Josiah-Jordan James in November of 2018 became the first McDonald’s All-American to sign with the Vols under head coach Rick Barnes. That kickstarted an annual streak of McDonald’s All-American signings for Tennessee that was recently extended to four straight years with the addition of freshman Julian Phillips.
Following James in the Class of 2019, Tennessee signed combo guard Jaden Springer in the Class of 2020, followed by point guard Kennedy Chandler in the Class of 2021.
Phillips is the seventh five-star prospect to sign with the Vols during the Barnes era. Three of the seven—James, Phillips and forward Jonas Aidoo—are on this year’s roster.
1,650-POINT SCORER TYREKE KEY ADDS SAVVY VET TO VOLS’ BACKCOURT
In addition to Tennessee’s highly-rated crop of freshmen, the Vols also welcome Indiana State graduate transfer and Tennessee native Tyreke Key.
Hailing from Celina, Tennessee—a two-hour drive northwest of Knoxville—Key ascended to sixth on Indiana State’s all-time scoring list while averaging 14.5 points per game over four full seasons. Key departed Indiana State as the school’s sixth all-time leading scorer with 1,650 career points.
A two-time first-team All-Missouri Valley Conference selection, Key sat out last season after undergoing shoulder surgery in November 2021. He enters this season having already earned both a bachelor’s and master’s degree from Indiana State.
In 2017, Key led Clay County High School to the TSSAA Class A State title game, averaging 42.7 points, 13.0 rebounds and 4.7 assists during three games at the state tournament.
During his senior season at Clay County, Key scored 1,380 points, breaking the 25-year-old TSSAA state record for most points in a single season that was held by former Kentucky star Tony Delk.
LEADERSHIP SURGE
Tennessee seniors Josiah-Jordan James, Olivier Nkamhoua and Santiago Vescovi each took part in an intensive year-long leadership curriculum last fall through this past summer.
The trio was selected for the 2021-22 cohort of Tennessee Athletics’ prestigious VOLeaders Academy, which culminated with an impactful summer service trip to Rwanda in July.
By using their platform in sport, student-athletes admitted into the VOLeaders Academy learn how to be a positive force for their team, campus, and local and global communities. The program aims to inspire student-athletes to find ways to use their influence and passion for sport to enact change that transcends their athletic success.
Underclassmen Jahmai Mashack and Zakai Zeigler are currently enrolled in this year’s VOLeaders Academy cohort.
-UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Thanks to a Thursday-night season opener, Tennessee was able to rest up over the weekend and get a jump start on preparing for a big road test this Saturday when the Vols head north to take on No. 17/16 Pittsburgh in the second edition of the Johnny Majors Classic.
When speaking with the media on Monday afternoon, head coach Josh Heupel said he was pleased with what he saw in all three phases during the UT’s 59-10 win over Ball State, but that there are plenty of areas for improvement as UT prepares to face an experienced Panthers team that will provide a much different challenge this weekend.
“After watching the ball game from the other night, there are some things that are really positive,” Heupel said. “I like what we did in all three phases, but there are some things that we will have to grow through really quickly before we play Saturday afternoon.”
“This is a big game for us, obviously. The first road test for us against a really good football team. They are tough and physical on both sides of the line of scrimmage, and they do a really nice job. It will be a big test for us. Awesome opportunity to recognize coach [Johnny] Majors and what he did for both programs, but in particular here at Tennessee. His years here as a player, as a coach, the impact that he has had and legacy that he has left on our program, is something that we still see and feel today.”
Junior running back Jabari Small and senior offensive lineman Jerome Carvin echoed Heupel’s sentiment about Pittsburgh, praising them for their physicality and toughness.
“They’re a good team,” Small said. “They have a lot of returning players on defense. They play physical. We are very familiar with the defense, but they’re a different team and we are a different team. We have to play the game and roll with the punches.”
Carvin said he expects a much stiffer challenge this week in dealing with the Panthers’ experienced and physical front seven.
“They’re really disciplined up front,” Carvin said. “They get after you, definitely in the pass (game). Run game, they are a stout group. Like I said earlier, linebackers like to fit up. Man, they are coached really well. We have to be on our P’s and Q’s. We have to be able to communicate well with each other up front, as well as with the tight ends and (running) backs, whether that’s in pass protection (or) putting hats on hats in the run game. This is a huge opportunity.”
Saturday’s game will be played at the newly named Acrisure Stadium (formerly Heinz Field) and be televised nationally on ABC at 3:30 p.m. The Vols will be looking to avenge a 41-34 loss in last year’s meeting with the Panthers at Neyland Stadium.
Opening Statement…
“I hope everyone had a great weekend. For us, I said after the ballgame, it was a unique opportunity for the coaches to get on the road. It was great to get out and see a lot of people, in-state and across our footprint, had an opportunity to watch some recruits. I thought that went really well. This is a big game for us, obviously. The first road test for us against a really good football team. Awesome opportunity to recognize coach (Johnny) Majors and what he did for both programs, but in particular here at Tennessee. His years here as a player, as a coach, the impact that he has had and legacy that he has left on our program, is something that we still see and feel today – so, a great opportunity there. Really good football team in all three phases. I faced them four times, this is the fourth time in five years. They are tough and physical on both sides of the line of scrimmage, and they do a really nice job. It will be a big test for us. After watching the ball game from the other night, there are some things that are really positive. I like what we did in all three phases, but there are some things that we will have to grow through really quickly before we play Saturday afternoon.”
On the difference in this year’s Pitt team…
“The structure of what they do offensively is a little bit different. They played with an extra tackle at times last week, some 12-personnel as well, running the football and then their play-action shots come off of that. In recent years, with the quarterback that they had, they were a little bit more spread and were pitching it around a little bit more. The tempo of the ball game will be a bit different. Defensively, what we are going see from them will be a little bit different. We have to do a great job of being physical with the front seven in particular, but really your entire defensive unit. You have to maintain gap integrity and have your eyes in the right place too, because play-action is going to come off of it and you cannot give them any chunk plays.”
On the team’s recent performance at the line of scrimmage on both sides…
“At the left tackle position, I thought both of them (Gerald Mincey and Jeremiah Crawford) played well throughout the course of the football game. In protection, you got a solid structure of what we were seeing, a lot of drop-eights. So, in some ways, you had a lot of double teams, two double teams working up front. We will find out more about them in pass protection this week. The front we are going to see from Pittsburgh is one of the better that we will see throughout the course of the season, a veteran group that plays extremely hard and can get after the quarterback, as well. Defensively, as far as just pressure, I thought we were able to apply some pressure, but we weren’t able to get home. Some of that was the structure of what they were doing, their concepts, getting the ball out of the quarterback’s hands extremely quickly and then the protections that they were using. I thought overall up front, there were a lot of positives that we wanted to see from them.”
On how Pitt’s defensive line compares to the SEC teams…
“This is a veteran group that plays extremely hard, and they are physically mature. They play with great technique. The structure of their defense, I don’t care what personnel grouping or what formation you are playing in, they are going to load it up and play with extra bodies in there. They make it difficult to run the football. You guys know , for us offensively, it starts with our ability to run the football, so that will be a pivotal part of the football game.”
On the performances of Warren Burrell and Christian Charles against Ball State…
“Those guys got a bulk of the work out on the perimeter. I thought they did a really nice job with the mixture of our coverages and the 50-50 balls they played pretty well down the sideline. I liked what I saw from them, obviously this week, out on the perimeter, we will see some guys that will be a bigger test for us.”
On the receiving group as a whole…
“Overall, excited about what they put on video for the first week. The guys that had played were really consistent. Cedric Tillman mainly, and I thought Jalin Hyatt did a really nice job while he was in there. Obviously, first play of the football game he was able to get in the end zone. The young guys inside our program, from Bru McCoy to the guys who have been here for a year, I thought handled themselves in a better way than they had a year ago. You could see some of their growth. There are things within what we are doing that we will need to perform at a higher level and be more consistent, this week in particular. These guys are going to play a bunch of press-man on the outside, and you’ve got to win 1-on-1s here.”
On his evaluation of the Pittsburgh defense…
“They gave up a couple of big runs, just misfit a couple of things, but overall they make it extremely difficult. Their front four are strong, physical, athletic. Their ability to get to the quarterback on normal downs, but then on third downs, too. They’ll try to scheme you up. They’re veteran on the outside. We’ve seen these guys a couple of the last times we’ve played them, and it’ll be a big test for us offensively.”
On the challenges of facing a quarterback new to the system, such as Pitt starter Kedon Slovis…
“I think just as much as anything, they have the ability to be different than what they’ve shown on tape. That can be in week one, or it can be what they’ve done at a previous stop. I thought he played pretty efficient throughout the course of the evening. For us, we have to be able to adjust during the course of the ball game to what we see, communicate on the sidelines and communicate those things out on the football field when we see them. We have to be disciplined. We have to do a great job in the run game, we have to smash it.”
On if he has any staff members alerting him on when to challenge a call…
“You try to in today’s game. Sometimes, you have to make a judgment call before, just because the team might be playing with tempo and you have to make a decision beforehand. You’re communicating with the side judges as well, as far as whether it’s being reviewed up top or not.”
On Jimmy Holiday’s performance vs. Ball State…
“He operated really efficient and got himself lined up, understood coverages on the back end. I was able to catch him running a little bit on a perimeter screen. Obviously, the dig route that he was able to score a touchdown on was a big play for him and for us. He’s somebody that just continues to get better inside of our system and really just fundamentally, having played that position for a very short amount of time—having played quarterback and transitioning outside. Saw him show up in special teams, too. That’s something they did a year ago, but he’s a better player on those units right now than he was at that time. I expect him to continue to grow and to have a huge impact inside of our program.”
On Kamal Hadden’s evaluation and the rotation at cornerback…
“Some of that might play out game-to-game during the course of it, just the flow of the football game. But anticipate all those guys playing a lot of snaps. Kamal did a really nice job. You mentioned him having a short amount of time in training camp. Since he’s come back, he’s handled himself and grown in a great way. He handled himself really mature while he was out, took it upon himself to kind of act like a coach and essentially give a report card to coach (Willie) Martinez on some of the guys during the course of practice. I think that kept him engaged in understanding what we’re doing. Performed really well the other night. Obviously, everybody saw the pick, but I thought he did the things that we were asking him to in some trap corner situations, coming up and being physical. A lot of positives.”
On Juwan Mitchell’s availability and Aaron Beasley’s growth over the last year…
“I thought the backers as a whole, in particular the first string of guys that got action, played fast, played physical, had their eyes in the right place and tackled well. Beasley played extremely well. I thought you could see him, just his growth from a year ago to who he was on the football field on Thursday night. Really liked a lot of what we saw from him. Juwan’s ability to be able to be healthy enough to play for us, we’ll find out here at the end of the week.”
On Jabari Small’s offseason work paying off…
“For Jabari, the work that he’s put in—that’s physically changing his body to understanding what we’re doing—that does give him more confidence. Absolutely does. You saw that play out a little bit on Thursday night, the ability to break some arm tackles. Going to need that consistently throughout the course of the season from him.”
On what he can apply from last year’s game against Pitt to the upcoming matchup…
“Last year’s ball game, yeah we can take away things. One, personnel. Some guys are different, but some of them are the same, so you have a better understanding of who they are against some of our personnel. The other thing is just understanding the type of game that’s going to be played, meaning that they’re smart, tough and competitive. The little things are going to add up to the big things that show up on the scoreboard, and we have to do a great job at taking care of the football. We have to find a way to create turnovers. Special teams will be a huge part of the football game. Field position is as well and maximizing our opportunities.”
On managing expectations after a strong first week…
“Last week has nothing to do with this coming week. A year ago has nothing to do with what’s going to happen this week. To perform the right way, you have to prepare the right way. That’s in the film room and making sure we’re getting an edge on that side of it, preparing for it, practicing in a great way and then be ready to go and compete.”
On what he saw from special teams Thursday night…
“Some really good things from our cover units, there are some things we have to get better at, too. Some young guys performed really well, some other guys have to be better with their fundamentals and technique – (it’s their) first live action. So, it’s an opportunity from week one to week two to really grow. That can happen for all our guys, veterans and coaches included, but certainly for our young guys.”
On Dylan Sampson performing in the game as he had done in practice…
“I thought he matched the things he had been doing in practice. He was able to take that to the football game and translate it. The bright lights, the energy, all of it. The stage wasn’t too big for him in any way.”
On appreciating the confidence of Jalin Hyatt and Tamarion McDonald as they have grown…
“Absolutely. Those are two guys that are great examples of guys that put in work and put themselves in a position to maximize opportunities when they present themselves and did that on the first two plays for the offense and for the defense. I expect those guys to continue to do that throughout the course of the year.”
On what makes Hendon Hooker such a threat in the passing game…
“He would tell you, and I would tell you too, that happens because of the guys on the perimeter finding ways to get open and the guys up front doing a great job in protection. He is someone that is continued to grow as far as understanding what we’re doing. His ability to be in the right place, so that he is finding the 1-on-1, man-to-man, or in zone coverage, finding the right area to attack, gives him the ability to get it into the playmaker’s hands. He’s smart, he’s competitive and he’s consistent in his work habits, I expect that to continue to grow as he is here this year.”
On the tight end targets in the opener…
“It’s just the way it unfolded during the course of that ball game. You look back at a year ago, there’s times where they end up with a bunch of targets and some games where it just doesn’t unfold that way as we try to attack defensive structure and personnel.”
On the speed and tempo of the offense…
“When we are able to play with tempo, we want to play with tempo. I thought the other night we were pretty efficient in handling that. We had no pre-snap penalties, we were in the right alignment for the most part. I thought guys were able to communicate and get lined up in a really good way, for the new guys that came into our program. A year ago for the new guys – which was everybody in game one, versus this past week – it was drastically different in the way they were able to handle it.”
On Joshua Josephs…
“Fast, long and explosive on the edge. I thought he did a nice job in the reps he got. That’s fitting the run and trying to apply some pressure to the quarterback. He’s a young guy that’s going to continue to grow inside of what we’re doing. I expect him to have a big role throughout the course of the year.”
On the safeties and defend the middle of the field…
“It’s difficult to defend depending on the structure of what you’re playing and managing your scheme against what you’re seeing during the course of a football game. Those two guys (Jaylen McCollough and Trevon Flowers) are probably some of the more mature guys inside of our program, when you talk about the two starting safeties. We will rotate at those positions, it won’t be 50-50, but they’ll see the bulk of the work.”
On if it is easy to get up for big game early in season…
“I think it’s definitely possible. Especially the group that we’re going against. We all know them pretty well from playing against them last year. Just watching them, they’re a tough group. Their whole team plays together. They are experienced. A lot of older guys on their team. They won’t beat themselves. They won’t make a lot of mistakes. (We) have to be mentally locked in and focused going into the ball game. We really got to play really hard. We have got to play over their intensity, not match them, but play over them.”
On Pitt’s defense…
“They’re really disciplined up front. They get after you, definitely in the pass (game). Run game, they are a stout group. Like I said earlier, linebackers like to fit up. Man, they are coached really well. We have to be on our P’s and Q’s. We have to be able to communicate well with each other up front, as well as with the tight ends and (running) backs, whether that’s in pass protection, putting hats on hats in the run game, allowing them to pick up lengths so running backs can hit it. Huge week, tough week for us. This is a huge opportunity. We got a bad taste in our mouth from last year. Can’t wait to go out there and play.”
On biggest takeaway from Ball State game…
“Biggest takeaway is just keep playing physical. Especially for this week as well because you’re going against a big group, physical group. Keep playing physical. Stay mentally focused. Stay mentally locked in. It’s huge. Especially with how fast we go. Got to be putting guys on the right guys. That will be big for this week.”
On the Ball State game…
“I thought we did a good job of playing with our hair on fire, enjoying the atmosphere, seeing the fans and enjoying the crowd. For me personally, I ran the ball pretty hard. I can always clean up on some reads. I maybe missed some cuts, and I need to get vertical. I was pleased with how the offensive line, Hendon (Hooker), the receivers and the whole team played. It was fun being out there again.”
On difference playing with 15 pounds of added weight…
“Mainly, it was with my confidence. I was pretty confident running the ball, running through tackles and running through smoke. It felt good. I felt good getting my feet back under me (and) catching my wind. As the season goes on, we’ll meet different challenges. Hopefully, I’ll grow with the season.”
On if the team looks back at the Pittsburgh game to notice things they did well and can improve on…
“One hundred percent. They’re a good team. They have a lot of returning players on defense. They play physical. We are very familiar with the defense, but they’re a different team and we are a different team. We have to play the game and roll with the punches.”
-UT Athletics