Quotes: Kellie Harper preview Alabama game

Quotes: Kellie Harper preview Alabama game

Tennessee head coach Kellie Harper met with the media on Wednesday in advance of Thursday’s SEC opener between the No. 7/9 Lady Vols (11-1) and Alabama (9-2). 

UT and the Crimson Tide will face off at Thompson-Boling Arena at 6:32 p.m. ET in a game live streamed on SECN+. Tickets are available at AllVols.com.

Lady Vols HC Kellie Harper / Credit: UT Athletics

Tennessee Head Coach Kellie Harper

Opening Statement…
“We’re really excited about starting SEC play. I think what you try to do in your non-conference schedule is to prepare yourself for your league, and to get your team as, hopefully, good as they can possibly be. So, we’re excited about now seeing where we are with the team. Jordan (Horston) is still not feeling well and will not be in practice today. Rae (Burrell) is continuing to progress, getting to do a little bit more each day in practice. So, I don’t know what that means in terms of a timeline still, but the progression has been there. So, the team feels good, they’re excited, and we’re ready to go.

On Rae Burrell’s injury progression…
“Rae’s (Burrell) been able to… I think each practice she’s getting to do a little bit more. It’s really to her comfort level. Part of where we’re at right now is letting her do more and then seeing how her body reacts in response to that the following day. So, you know, I think she’s getting a little more confident every day. We’re starting to progress her into more drills, for sure, in practice right now.”

On Jordan Horston’s availability for game against Alabama…
“(It’s) probably one of those game-time or game-day decisions, for sure. So, at this point, I know she can’t be here today, so it makes it a little difficult.”

On Alabama…
“Alabama has three athletic perimeter players that can get to the basket and can shoot threes. I think their quickness on the perimeter is one of their strengths. They do a really good job of going to those top three players. I think they’re very well coached. I think they run a lot of good stuff. They’re putting points on the board. They’ve got the right pieces around those three to get them the basketball.”

On running different defenses against Alabama…
“At this point, we’ll have a plan A, and we’ll probably have a plan B and probably a Plan C going into the game. You know, I think right now everybody knows our main defense is our man. We want our man to be as good as it can possibly be. We’ve got to, at some point, be a little more confident, a little more comfortable with the alternative defense, whether that is working with what we have, and getting it a little better, or maybe finding something else that we want to put in. So, it’s still a work in progress. Our alternate defenses are still a work in progress.”

On Sara Puckett starting against UTC…
I think Sara (Puckett) is really good. I think she is very talented. I think she’s very composed, very mature. That was another one of those situations where it was honestly a game-time decision. She handled it really well. I think the maturity really helps her there. And then the confidence that she has and her teammates have in her really helps when you have to jump in the starting lineup.”

On whether she saw what she wanted to see defensively against Chattanooga…
“I thought, defensively, we had a lot of breakdowns. I thought our off-the-ball defense, and more of it being our system, I didn’t think we executed our system as well as we need to. We really worked hard on that after that game, watched it on film. We’ve got to get better there. I think sometimes when you have Tamari Key in the paint, you know you’ve got a big eraser back there that can clean up a lot of our mistakes. We have to make less mistakes. I think that’s really important. I think our team understands that. So, we’ve got to get better. We weren’t as good as I wanted to be in that game. I think our team understands that. We’ll keep working hard to get better.”

On Tamari Key’s progression offensively…
“I think if you look at the progression that we’ve had as a team this year, and then you can go back two years, you can easily see we get the ball in the paint more now, more consistently, in better position to score. Now, part of that is our execution has been a little bit better on the perimeter. We are looking for our post players, but also, they are doing a great job of posting up and looking for the right spot to get the ball in. So, it’s been a lot of different things, right combination of those things. Tamari (Key) is playing with great confidence. There’s no doubt that that alone has been able to elevate her game. I think the way she carries herself in practice, I mean, we’re in practice yesterday, and we are continuing to pound the ball inside, pound the ball inside. I just want to sit back and smile at one point, because it’s like the light bulb clicked with this group, and they understand now. She’s not going to score every point; we’re going to still have opportunities on the perimeter. Our team understands that is a strength of ours.”

On what can be taken from previous prep for SEC play into this year...
“After you go through a season once, you really know the teams and coaches better. Now, you go through (the SEC season) twice, you have a really good understanding of how they play, what their strengths are. You probably tried some things that worked and tried some things that didn’t work versus different coaches and different systems and different styles and different players. So, you just have a little bit better confidence, at least I do as a coach, going in with a scouting report. It’s not just what I’ve seen on film. I have a little bit more experience, a little bit more knowledge of what has worked in the past. I think that’s very valuable in that you can’t speed that up. You can’t speed that experience up. So, I think that’s been really big in terms of our confidence going into the season.”

On managing players’ minutes to avoid exhaustion during a three-game week…
“Well, I thought our first game, we were able to keep those minutes about even, which was really good. We needed some high minutes with some of our players coming off the bench. We had a pretty tough practice. Then we’ll go to prep practices. So, the day before the games will be a little bit lighter this week, because we do have three games. I think our players understand at this point they have to take care of their body. We have to reiterate that. They have to hydrate, they have to eat, they have to do the rehab, they have to do treatment recovery. There’s so much going on right now, especially when you’re in a three-game per week part of your season.”

On Rae Burrell’s next steps in recovery…
“Well, I think for her it’s just getting a little bit more time on the court, live action time on the court. In practice, I think that’s really the next big step for her.”

On Alexus Dye’s confidence building…
“I think right now we can always count on her being aggressive. We talked to her about continuing to be good at what she’s good at, which is rebounding, getting into the basket and knocking down jump shots. I think for her, you know, also now stepping up and being able to guard like really good players in our league, I think is going to be a big, big step for her. But she is so much fun to coach. She’s a player that you can walk in and be very, very direct, very blunt with. Here’s the stats, here’s what I need, here’s where you are, you’ve got to be better at this, or you’ve got to do this but keep doing this. And she typically responds really well in those situations.”

On first SEC game being at home…
“To me, it’s the best environment. We had a great crowd for our opener after Christmas against Chattanooga, I thought. I was so excited. I’ve been excited about hearing some ticket numbers that have been out for this game for Alabama game. I know that’s not always easy, especially when you’ve got a big game down the street in Nashville that same day. So, I’m super excited about our fans and the community support that we’ve had here. So, when you have this environment, you really do wish all of your games were here. It’s not so much that I don’t want to be traveling, or, you know, I don’t want to play in another gym, but if you’ve got the best, you’ve got to be excited about it.”

-UT Athletics

Shorthanded Vols Fall at Alabama, 73-68

Shorthanded Vols Fall at Alabama, 73-68

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Despite being down two starters, 14th-ranked Tennessee battled before falling on the road to No. 19 Alabama, 73-68, late Wednesday.
 
Junior forward Olivier Nkamhoua led the Vols in scoring and rebounding with 15 points and nine boards. Junior guard Santiago Vescovi also had a productive night, contributing 13 points and six rebounds.

Vols F Olivier Nkamhoua / Credit: UT Athletics


 
Making his first career start, freshman guard Zakai Zeigler scored 11 points and had four assists.
 
Senior Noah Gurley led Alabama with 20 points on 8-for-10 shooting.
 
Tennessee was playing the game without two of its season-long starters—freshman guard Kennedy Chandler and super senior forward John Fulkerson.
 
After entering the halftime break tied at 33 with Alabama, Tennessee did not trail for the first 18:58 of the second half, but never led by more than six points.
 
Facing its largest deficit of the second half at 63-57 with just over six minutes remaining, Alabama strung together a 10-2 run—capped off by a Jaden Shackelford layup that gave the Tide a 67-65 lead with 1:02 remaining.
 
Tennessee quickly responded with a 3-pointer from Nkamhoua with 50 seconds remaining to regain the lead at 68-67, but Alabama fired back once more with a deep three from Keon Ellis to pull in front, 70-68.
 
After the Vols missed a 3-point attempt on the other end and Alabama’s JD Davison went 1-for-2 at the line, Zeigler missed a potential game-tying 3-pointer.
 
Despite Tennessee leading by as many as 10 in the first half, the two teams went into the halftime break tied at 33 apiece.
 
The Vols and Tide played a tightly-contested first 12 minutes before Tennessee used a quick 10-3 spurt to take a 33-23 lead at the 3:23 mark.
 
After hitting just two of its first 12 field goal attempts, Tennessee rebounded by making 11 of its next 16 shots, capped off by a Brandon Huntley-Hatfield layup that extended the Vols’ lead to 10.
 
Alabama however quickly responded with a 10-0 run to end the first half that knotted up the score at the break.
 
UP NEXT: Tennessee returns home for its SEC home opener against Ole Miss on Wednesday, Jan. 5. The game is set for a 7 p.m. ET tipoff and will air on SEC Network.
 
VOLS CONTINUING TO CREATE TAKEAWAYS: With 10 steals on Saturday, Tennessee recorded its seventh game of 10 or more steals this season.

-UT Athletics

Preview: Vols Set to Battle Purdue in TransPerfect Music City Bowl

Preview: Vols Set to Battle Purdue in TransPerfect Music City Bowl

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee will conclude its first season under head coach Josh Heupel on Thursday afternoon with a postseason matchup against Big 10 foe Purdue in the TransPerfect Music City Bowl at Nissan Stadium in Nashville.

The Vols will look to earn their fifth consecutive bowl victory. The previous four have all come against opponents from the Big 10.

Velus Jones Jr. – UT WR / Credit: UT Athletics

BROADCAST INFO

Thursday’s contest will be televised on ESPN with Tom Hart (PxP), Jordan Rodgers (analyst) and Cole Cubelic (field analyst) on the call. Kickoff is slated for 2 p.m. CT/3 p.m. ET.

Fans can listen to Tennessee’s official radio broadcast on the Vol Network (WIVK-FM 107.7/WNML-FM 99.1) and satellite radio (Sirius Ch. 80, XM Ch. 190, Internet Ch. 161). 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. Big Orange Countdown begins at 12:30 p.m. CT/1:30 p.m. ET.

GAMEDAY INFO

For the most up-to-date information on the 2021 TransPerfect Music City Bowl, including info on tickets, parking and gameday/stadium policies, visit the bowl’s official website www.MusicCityBowl.com or check Tennessee’s Bowl Central Page.

NEED TO KNOW

Bowl Facts
Tennessee is going bowling for the 54th time in program history. That ranks fifth all-time behind Alabama, Georgia, Texas and Oklahoma. The Vols are 29-24 in bowl games, and those 29 victories rank seventh nationally. UT is making its third Music City Bowl appearance. The Vols topped No. 24 Nebraska, 38-24, in the 2016 game. UT dropped a 30-27 double overtime contest to North Carolina in the 2010 Music City Bowl.

Heupel is the fifth UT coach in the last 70 years to lead the Vols to a bowl berth in his debut season, joining Bill Battle (1970), Phillip Fulmer (1993), Lane Kiffin (2009) and Derek Dooley (2010). Of those previous four only Battle (def. Air Force in 1971 Sugar Bowl) won a bowl game in his first full debut season. Heupel has guided teams to a bowl berth in all four seasons as a head coach (three at UCF), and he is 1-2 in those previous games (lost to No. 11 LSU, 40-32, in 2019 Fiesta Bowl; def. Marshall, 48-25, in 2019 Gasparilla Bowl; lost to No. 16 BYU, 49-23, in 2020 Boca Raton Bowl).

Last Time Out
The Vols capped the regular season with a 45-21 victory over Vanderbilt on Senior Day. The Big Orange had a pair of 100-yard rushers for the second time this year as freshman Jaylen Wright and sophomore Jabari Small took 15 carries each for 112 and 103 yards, respectively. Tennessee averaged 6.8 yards per rush, totaling 285 yards on the ground for its fourth game above 250 yards rushing this season. Hendon Hooker delivered another efficient performance for UT, producing 231 total yards (156 passing, 75 rushing) and passing for a pair of touchdowns. Cedric Tillman led all receivers with six catches for 106 yards and a pair of touchdowns. Defensively, Theo Jackson opened the scoring with a 55-yard interception return for a touchdown, marking the third pick six this season for the Vols.

Tillman Approaching 1K
Tillman has emerged as one of the SEC’s top receivers this season, ranking sixth in the conference with a team-high 931 receiving yards, tied for fourth with nine touchdown catches and fifth in yards per reception (16.33). The redshirt junior is aiming to become just the eighth player in program history to reach 1,000 yards receiving in a season and the first since Justin Hunter (1,083) in 2012.
 
Tillman has recorded at least five catches in seven straight games and has also caught at least one touchdown pass in six consecutive games, becoming the first Vol to achieve that feat since Joey Kent did it in seven straight games to start the 1995 season.

Fast, Fun, Real
Josh Heupel specialty, Tennessee leads the nation in offensive plays per minute at 2.94. Ole Miss is second at 2.87. By comparison, the Vols averaged 2.36 a year ago, which was 58th in the FBS. UT averages 1.61 points per minute, which also leads the FBS. From 2018-20, Heupel’s UCF teams averaged a nation-high 3.04 plays per minute.
 
Record Watch
Tennessee enters the Music City Bowl with a chance to break a couple of school records. With 466 points scored this season, the Vols need just 19 to break the previous program record of 484, which was set back in 1993. UT is also just two touchdowns shy of tying the school record of 63 set by the 2016 team.

SERIES HISTORY

Boilermakers lead series, 1-0
Tennessee and Purdue have played just once previously, a 27-22 Boilermakers’ victory in the 1979 Bluebonnet Bowl in Houston. This will be the first time Heupel has faced a Big Ten opponent as a head coach. The last time he played a Big Ten opponent was ironically Purdue on Sept. 16, 2017, when he was the offensive coordinator at Missouri.

ABOUT PURDUE

The Boilermakers, led by fifth-year head coach Jeff Brohm, enter the Music City Bowl off an 8-4 regular season in which they finished tied for second in the Big 10 West standings with a 6-3 conference record. Purdue is receiving votes in both the Associated Press and AFCA Coaches polls.

Veteran quarterback Aidan O’Connell leads an explosive offense that ranks second in the Big 10 in passing yards per game (340.2). O’Connell ranks third in the Big 10 with 3,174 passing yards and fourth in the league with 23 touchdown passes. However, he will be missing his top target in first-team All-American wideout David Bell, who elected to opt out of the game in order to prepare for the NFL Draft. Bell led the Big 10 with 93 receptions and 116.9 receiving yards per game this season. Junior wide receiver Milton Wright will look to pick up the slack after leading the team with seven touchdown catches this year.

The Boilermakers will also be missing one of their top defensive players in All-American defensive end George Karlaftis, who like Bell has opted out of the game to prepare for the NFL Draft. Karlaftis led the team with 11.5 tackles for loss and five sacks on the year. Purdue will have its leading tackler in senior linebacker Jaylan Alexander, who racked up 94 tackles and had 7.5 tackles for loss, five pass breakups and one forced fumble. Junior safety Cam Allen leads the Boilermakers’ secondary with 56 tackles, a forced fumble and a team-high four interceptions.

-UT Athletics

WATCH: On-field report and pregame warmups of Vols at Music City Bowl

WATCH: On-field report and pregame warmups of Vols at Music City Bowl

Host Vince Ferrara checks in from the field at Nissan Stadium and shares some pregame warm-up video before Tennessee sets to play Purdue in the TransPerfect Music City Bowl at Nissan Stadium in Nashville.

Our bowl coverage is powered by…Image Matters, Hound Dogs, Bragg Weight Loss And Wellness, VisitMySmokies.com, Nothing Too Fancy, Camp Rivers Landing & The Cadence Nashville operated by WhyHotels.

Vols DB Kamal Hadden / Credit: 99.1 The Sports Animal

Jmmy’s blog: Purdue DC expects ‘4 hours of chaos’

Jmmy’s blog: Purdue DC expects ‘4 hours of chaos’

By Jimmy Hyams

NASHVILLE — Purdue defensive coordinator Jeff Lambert has a pretty good idea what to expect from Tennessee’s offense today in the TransPerfect Music City Bowl.

After all, he faced Josh Heupel’s Central Florida team in the Gasparilla Bowl in 2019.

“Four hours of chaos,’’ Lambert said.

That’s what he saw two years ago when Central Florida whipped Marshall 48-25. The Golden Knights had 587 total yards on 78 plays, and struck a brilliant balance: 310 rushing, 277 passing.

“You’ve got to line up and defend the run,’’ Lambert said.

Lambert said it’s hard to replicate Tennessee’s up-tempo offense in practice, even though Purdue’s offense tried.  There’s practice speed and there’s game speed, and a defense’s inability to get a simulated practice look at the hurry-up offense is a key reason the Vols lead the nation in first-quarter scoring. And a key reason UT put up 28 points in the first quarter on Missouri and South Carolina.

Lambert said a defense usually plays 60 to 70 snaps a game and he has about 30 seconds to call his defensive signals.

“With these guys, you get six seconds,’’ Lambert said.

Lambert said Tennessee hits you with big plays and takes advantage of misalignments.

And he said the Vols spread the field to “take advantage of all the grass.’’

In 2018, Purdue lost 63-14 to Auburn in the Music City Bowl.

Lambert was asked if his defense could keep its composure if UT scores quickly.

“I told the guys, `You can lose your composure when I lose mine,’’’ Lambert said.

Headed in the Right Direction

Tennessee offensive coordinator Alex Golesh was asked to give a thumbnail sketch of the four offensive players that decided to return next year: quarterback Hendon Hooker, receiver Cedric Tillman, and tight ends Princeton Fant and Jacob Warren.

While applauding that foursome, Golesh took the question in another direction.

“With all the guys that want to come back,’’ Golesh said, “it tells you we’re headed in the right direction.’’

Indeed. Hooker developed into arguably the SEC’s third-best quarterback after not starting the first two games. Tillman had 57 catches after he recorded just eight in his previous three seasons. Warren tied for third on the team with 18 catches, two more than JaVonta Payton.

Wright gets the right motivation

The improvement of Hooker and Tillman and nickelback Theo Jackson was obvious.

What wasn’t so obvious were the steps made by former five-star left tackle Darnell Wright, a borderline bust his first two years at Tennessee.

Wright was a steady force playing the blind side. And Golesh said a key reason was offensive line coach Glen Elarbee.  

“Darnell Wright needed someone to believe in him so he could believe in himself,’’ Golesh said.

Elarbee did that.

Golesh called Wright “super athletic’’ and said he’ll get better as he gets stronger and more confident.

“He finally feels comfortable,’’ Golesh said of Wright. “It took six months to get there. … He’s a happy-go-lucky guy who becomes a dude that tries to put people on the ground on game day.’’

Golesh not Super Concerned that Mays is out

Tennessee will be without its best offensive lineman today, Cade Mays, who tried to fight through injury so he could suit up in the bowl game.

Golesh said Mays is “obviously a big loss’’ but added that he is not “super concerned about it.’’

Golesh believes Dayne Davis, a former walk-on, and junior college transfer JJ Crawford, who arrived at UT in July, can adequately handle the right tackle spot.

Brohm praises QB O’Connell

 Purdue offensive coordinator Brian Brohm doesn’t think quarterback Aiden O’Connell gets the national attention he deserves.

O’Connell took over a few games into the season for starter Jake Plummer and beat two top five teams: Iowa and Michigan State.

O’Connell also completed 73.5% of his 393 passes for 3,178 yards and 23 touchdowns against eight interceptions.

‘’He’s done a tremendous job this year,’’ Brohm said. “He’s a great story. He came as a walk-on and was No. 9 on the depth chart. … He never lost the desire to be the best quarterback he can be.’’

That quarterback the last six games of the season was “phenomenal,’’ Brohm said.

Brohm said O’Connell has been “slightly unnoticed’’ nationally for his efficiency and effectiveness.

What makes O’Connell efficient and effective?

“He’s very accurate’’ Brohm said. “He’s a great decision maker. He gets the ball out quickly, and that helps the protection. He’s not real athletic or elusive.’’

The later is good news for a defense that was confounded all season by mobile quarterbacks, from Kenny Pickett to Emory Jones to Matt Corral to Bryce Young to Will Levis.

O’Connell will be without his top two receivers: David Bell (93 catches) and Milton Wright (57 catches). Still, Purdue has three other receivers (one a tight end) who caught at least 33 passes.

Even without Bell and Wright, expect the Boilermakers to air it out. They completed more passes (381) than they had rush attempts (359) this year.

PREDICTION: Tennessee 41, Purdue 27.

——————

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Brad Paisley Sits In For Ellen DeGeneres As Guest Host On Her Show

Brad Paisley Sits In For Ellen DeGeneres As Guest Host On Her Show

Brad Paisley is very familiar with the role of being “host” – but that’s normally for an awards show. But now he got a taste of being a talk show host with his turn as guest host for Ellen DeGeneres‘ daytime show.

Brad has made several appearances as guest, but now he was the one carrying the show…which got off to an interesting start as Brad shared his session with the writers…

During the show, Brad got to talk to Tori Kelly about her role in the new movie Sing 2

Photo Credit: Jeff Lipsky

Brett Eldredge Thanks His Fans For Their Support, & Shares New Music

Brett Eldredge Thanks His Fans For Their Support, & Shares New Music

2022 will see a new album from Brett Eldredge and with just a few days left in 2021, he’s sharing the first song from it with fans.

Brett says, “I wanted to do something extra special this year for my fans who have always gone above and beyond to show me love and support on this crazy journey. My Christmas gift to you. ‘Holy Water,’ the first song off my upcoming album, is out now. I hope you enjoy it.”

Check out this special acoustic version of the track that Brett shared…

Brett also released a full music video for “Holy Water” which you can watch here…

Photo Courtesy of Brett Eldredge

Callista Clark Sings a Tim McGraw Song, and He Approves

Callista Clark Sings a Tim McGraw Song, and He Approves

Before her 2022 kicks off Callista Clark is spending some time at home between the holidays – but that doesn’t mean she’s taking a break from making music.

Armed with only her guitar and a camera to capture her performance, Callista sat down and sang a Tim McGraw song.

With the message “One of my fav Tim McGraw songs – ‘Hard To Say Mad At'” Callista shared this video…

Not only did fans love it – Tim McGraw himself commented too, “One of my favorites too. Great job!”

“Hard To Stay Mad At” is from Tim’s 2020 album, Here On Earth.

A lot of people are recording their own cover versions of Callista Clark’s current single “It’s ‘Cause I Am” from her EP, Real To Me.

Photo Courtesy of Callista Clark

Vols in the NFL – Week 16 Update

Vols in the NFL – Week 16 Update

Nigel Warrior and Ethan Wolf had an unforgettable week, recording their first NFL tackle and reception, respectively, highlighting the 16th week of play for former Tennessee Volunteers in the NFL.

Jalen Reeves-Maybin continued to make an impact on the Detroit defense. This week, he notched seven tackles, forced a late fumble that gave the Lions a chance to win the game, and recorded a pass breakup. His head coach Dan Campbell has taken notice of his play recently, saying “when he’s been out there on defense and on special teams he’s just, he makes plays. He’s a football player. That doesn’t go unnoticed.”

For the Vol-heavy New Orleans Saints, Ethan Wolf made a pair of catches on Monday Night Football after being elevated from the practice squad earlier that day. After spending his first four seasons on various practice squads, Wolf recorded his first career NFL reception in his second NFL game. Bryce Thompson was also elevated to the 53-man roster for the first time in his young NFL career. Shy Tuttle tied a career high with six tackles, and Alvin Kamara led the team in rushing with 52 yards after being named to the 2022 NFL Pro Bowl (his fifth Pro Bowl nod) last Wednesday.

Saints TE Ethan Wolf / Credit: UT Athletics

Joshua Palmer caught his third touchdown of the season for the Chargers. The rookie had five receptions in total, amassing 43 yards against the Texans.

Cordarrelle Patterson found the endzone on the ground, his sixth rushing touchdown this year and 11th total, as the Falcons picked up a 20-16 win at home.

Nigel Warrior secured a career milestone, wrapping up his first NFL tackle on a snowy Sunday afternoon in Seattle.

A full recap of the Vol performances below as the teams enter week 17 action hoping to put their squads in playoff contention with only two weeks remaining in the NFL regular season.

Derek Barnett – DE – Eagles
Wrapped up four tackles in a win over the Giants

Marquez Callaway – WR – Saints
Caught four passes for 46 yards against Miami

Justin Coleman – DB – Dolphins
Placed on the COVID-19 Reserve list for week 16

Dustin Colquitt – P – Browns
Only had one punt for 37 yards against Green Bay

Morgan Cox – LS – Titans
Successfully converted nine snaps (five punts, two extra points, two field goals) in a Thursday night victory over the 49ers

Jason Croom – TE – Eagles
Injured Reserve

Joshua Dobbs – QB – Steelers
Injured Reserve

Alex Ellis – TE – Cardinals
Practice Squad

Malik Jackson – DT – Browns
Had one tackle against the Packers

Ja’Wuan James – OL – Ravens
Injured Reserve

Jauan Jennings – WR – 49ers
Made a pair of grabs for 19 yards against the Titans

Alexander Johnson – LB – Broncos
Injured Reserve

Jakob Johnson – FB – Patriots
Caught one pass for nine yards in a loss to Buffalo

Alvin Kamara – RB – Saints
Gained 52 yards on the ground in 13 attempts on Monday night against the Dolphins. Kamara was named to the 2022 NFL Pro Bowl last Wednesday

John Kelly – RB – Browns
Practice Squad

Josh Malone – WR – Packers
Practice Squad

Khalil McKenzie – G/DT – Ravens
Returned to action with Baltimore, securing a pair of tackles against Cincinnati

Emmanuel Moseley – CB – 49ers
Injured Reserve

Michael Palardy – P – Dolphins
Had six punts for 255 yards, three of which were downed inside the 20

Joshua Palmer – WR – Chargers
Had his third touchdown reception of the season and picked up 43 yards on five catches against Houston

Cordarrelle Patterson – WR – Falcons
Scored Atlanta’s opening touchdown on the ground in a 20-16 win over Detroit

Kyle Phillips – DL – Jets
Made one tackle in a 26-21 win over the Jaguars

Jalen Reeves-Maybin – LB – Lions
Continues to produce at a high level, making seven tackles, forcing his second fumble of the season, and adding a pass breakup

Trey Smith – OL – Chiefs
Did not allow a sack in 69 snaps against Pittsburgh in a 36-10 victory

Luke Stocker – TE – Vikings
Played in his 10th contest this season against the Rams

Cameron Sutton – CB – Steelers
Started his 14th game of the season at Kansas City

Darrell Taylor – DE – Seahawks
Recorded three tackles against Chicago

Bryce Thompson – CB – Saints
Called up to the Saints’ active roster for the first time in his career

Shy Tuttle – DL – Saints
Tied a career high with six tackles on Monday Night Football against the Dolphins

Kendal Vickers – DE – Raiders
Did not play in the win over Denver

Nigel Warrior – DB – Seahawks
Registered his first career NFL tackle against Chicago

Ethan Wolf – TE – Saints
Made his first career NFL reception, catching two passes for eight yards on Monday night

-UT Athletics

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