SEC football decommit totals the last 30 months; UT 2nd highest at one per month

SEC football decommit totals the last 30 months; UT 2nd highest at one per month

Charlotte, NC – September 1, 2018 – Bank of America Stadium: Coach Jeremy Pruitt of the University of Tennessee Volunteers during a regular season game
(Photo by Donald Page / ESPN Images)

By Vince Ferrara / @VinceSports

The more Jeremy Pruitt’s 2021 recruiting class continues to grow in numbers of commits, the more the discussion increases on how the numbers will work and what the class will look like when it’s signed.

A big part of that discussion is decommitments. Some are initiated by the player. Others are initiated by the school.

Despite the recruiting dead period and the several month stay-at-home orders, recruits have been pledging to programs around the country in high volume, including the nation’s commitment leader, Tennessee, with 24. FBS commitment totals are currently more than double what they were at this point last year. Virtual recruiting has sped-up the process of football recruits deciding on their college futures for recruits.

“I think what you’re seeing with Tennessee and Jeremy Pruitt is a reflection of their turnaround this fall (2019,)” said ESPN recruiting and college football analyst Tom Luginbill to Josh Ward and me on Sports 180 on 99.1 The Sports Animal here in Knoxville about the hot run of recruiting for the Vols. “Finish strong and then move into the recruiting cycle, I just think it developed a ton of momentum for the Vols. This past fall, when it looked like things were falling off a cliff, for the most part, kids held firm. I think that’s a reflection of the coaching staff.”

Will those commits stick around college football, according to Luginbill?

“I think you’re going to see a huge spike in decommitments. There’s a lot that kids haven’t seen out there because they didn’t have coaches coming to their campus for spring football. They didn’t have the opportunity to attend junior days. They haven’t gone out there and been on the camp and combine circuit and had that information be relayed back to the college coaches for them to study it more. I still think there’s a lot of information to be unearthed on behalf of prospects. Not to say that everyone who commits now is suddenly going to decommit. I don’t think that’s the case at all. But, I do think, that when everything gets face-to-face again, you’re going to see some changes.”

Using the 247Sports decommitment database, here are the decommit numbers for Jeremy Pruitt at Tennessee, and the entire SEC, the last two and a half years.

The starting point in this exercise is when coaches were named head coaches at their schools, including Jeremy Pruitt 30 months ago, when we had six coaching hires in the SEC. Only decommits that happened after those hires are counted. The rest of the schools were given a similar December 1, 2017 start point to count decoomits for close comparison. Decommits that returned to sign with that same school or are currently committed again are not counted. These numbers are obviously flexible moving forward.

Decommits the last 30 months, through May 31, 2020
Florida – 31   (Mullen – start date Nov. 26, 2017)
Tennessee – 30   (Pruitt – start date Dec. 7, 2017)
Mississippi St. – 27   (Moorhead/Leach – start date Nov. 28, 2017)
Arkansas – 26   (Morris/Pittman – start date Dec. 6, 2017)
Ole Miss – 26   (Luke/Kiffin – start date Nov. 26, 2017)
LSU – 22   (Orgeron)
Alabama – 19   (Saban)
Georgia – 17   (Smart)
Missouri – 16   (Odom/Drinkwitz)
Kentucky – 14   (Stoops)
Auburn – 12   (Malzahn)
South Carolina – 12   (Muschamp)
Texas A&M – 10   (Fisher – start date Dec. 1, 2017)
Vanderbilt – 5   (Mason)

For perspective, Clemson has had ONE decommitment since December 23, 2016. That happened April 21st this year. The Tigers program went 40 months without a decommitment. Tennessee and Florida have averaged one per month the last two-and-half years.

Here’s the breakdown for Tennessee, per class. Again, these are only players that decommited since Pruitt was named head coach at UT and do not include returning decommits.

Tennessee decommits by class under Pruitt
2018 Class: 12
2019 Class: 5
2020 Class: 12
2021 Class: 0
2022 Class: 0
2023 Class: 1
Total: 30 decommits

Tennessee, under Pruitt, has averaged 1 decommit per month during his tenure. That sounds like a lot and is second-most in the SEC, only behind Florida.

If that one-per-month pace holds, then the Vols should expect at least 6 more decommitments by the early signing period and 8 total by the February signing day. That would mean 1/3rd of the current class of 24 commits won’t sign with UT.

Luginbill spoke to one thing that could help UT hold on to the class.

“You have to show progress as a program. You have to get one or more wins than you had the year before. You have to go to a bigger bowl. People want to see progress. They want to see momentum. That’s going to carry weight in recruiting.”

Luginbill says teams like the Vols are going to have to continue to recruit the committed players.

“These guys (coaching staffs) are all going to have to re-recruit their class and maybe recruit their class harder than ever before once things open back up again. A guy’s a verbal commitment. That just means a guy’s a verbal commitment. If they want him, there’s going to have to recruit. They’re going to go after him. And, that’s why decommitments happen.”

Tom’s right. Many will stay, but many will move around the country. Verbal commits are simply reservations. Schools are subtlety, and other times directly, pressuring kids to grab a spot while they can. Then, either side can cancel that reservation at any time.

There are other factors that could lead to UT not seeing the once-a-month class departure trend. Kids may have a better connection with this staff as a group and the more solid ground under the program than in years prior.

For some though, the high decommit totals could be a good thing, considering all the highly rated prospects UT is involved with that are still on the board. There’s also the large amount of 3-star commitments that have drawn critique about the class that could be nudged to move on to make room for the 4 and 5-star players. Upgrading is a thing in major college football.

I’d expect some to be convinced to switch commitments by other schools, some will make their own decisions when they see other schools in person and some will be encouraged (in various ways) to look for an opportunity at a different school. It will likely be some of all of the above. How many will move on will be fascinating to watch.

Find more of my broadcasting work at VinceSports.net.

Unified Statement from Tennessee Athletics Leadership

Unified Statement from Tennessee Athletics Leadership

UT statue / Credit: UT Athletics

Tennessee Athletics has issued the following statement from Director of Athletics Phillip Fulmer and its 15 head coaches:

We hold our student-athletes to very high standards. With rare exceptions, our young men and women meet those standards and represent themselves, their families, their teams and the University of Tennessee with excellence—academically, athletically and socially. Right now, our student-athletes are hurting. They navigate an emotional road of sadness, confusion and rage. Our black student-athletes carry the added burden of fear and hopelessness—an old wound torn open again by the horrifying, auto-repeat playlist of viral violence in our country that seemingly will not cease.

As Tennessee head coaches, we are now calling on anyone who is a fan of the Vols and Lady Vols to meet and expect a standard in our daily walk. Let us all refuse to accept or tolerate the unjust treatment of our black neighbors. Let us challenge those who attempt to justify, dismiss, ignore or explain away mistreatment of blacks or any other person of color. Let us meet this standard head-on, out loud and outside our homes. Demand action that leads to change. Demand PROGRESS. This is a basic, human principle that, among some, seems to have become as endangered as basic human rights for blacks in our communities.

Society could benefit by injecting into our communities an element of the “team” mindset that exists in a sport locker room. It’s widely accepted that sport teaches valuable lessons about leadership, discipline, collaboration, dependability and perseverance. However, the most IMPACTFUL and life-changing lesson sport teaches might actually be the lesser-touted ability to fully accept and embrace people who are different from us and have very different life experiences. On healthy teams, if you wear the same jersey as me, I’ve got your back—regardless of race or ethnicity, it doesn’t matter. Let’s go work together and win. Period.

Wherever you’re reading this, it likely holds true that the cultures that exist in the sports programs at your local high school or college are much healthier than the culture in your local community. Why do these healthy cultures exist in small sports teams’ locker rooms all across the country, but not in our larger communities? What can we study within a healthy team dynamic that can be applied to a metropolitan city or a rural farm town? As coaches, we don’t have all the answers to fix what’s been broken for so long. But if total acceptance, understanding and empathy—regardless of human differences—can coexist on sports teams, those things should be able to coexist anywhere.

Vol Nation, let’s rise to the challenge to meet a new standard. If you’re going to support our black student-athletes when they compete, please have the courage to support them and their families in their daily pursuit of peace, happiness and equity.

Phillip Fulmer, Director of Athletics
Beth Alford-Sullivan, Track & Field/Cross Country
Rick Barnes, Men’s Basketball
Lisa Glenn, Rowing
Kellie Harper, Women’s Basketball
Matt Kredich, Swimming & Diving
Alison Ojeda, Women’s Tennis
Judi Pavon, Women’s Golf
Brian Pensky, Soccer
Jeremy Pruitt, Football
Eve Rackham, Volleyball
Tony Vitello, Baseball
Brennan Webb, Men’s Golf
Karen Weekly, Softball
Ralph Weekly, Softball
Chris Woodruff, Men’s Tennis

-UT Athletics

“Big Orange Connect” Set For June 3 at 6:30 p.m. ET

“Big Orange Connect” Set For June 3 at 6:30 p.m. ET

Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee Athletics will host the first “Big Orange Connect,” a virtual fan appreciation event featuring head coaches and administration, at 6:30 p.m. ET on Wednesday, June 3. Volunteer fans can watch the event live for free on Tennessee Athletics’ official Facebook page.

Hosted by “The Voice of the Vols,” Bob Kesling, “Big Orange Connect” will be headlined by guests Chancellor Donde Plowman, Director of Athletics Phillip Fulmer, football head coach Jeremy Pruitt, men’s basketball head coach Rick Barnes and women’s basketball head coach Kellie Harper.

Fans can interact virtually and submit questions for Fulmer or the head coaches prior to the event by clicking here or by using the hashtag #BigOrangeConnect on social media platforms. Wednesday’s festivities will also include select fan giveaways during the live stream.

“Big Orange Connect” is presented by First Horizon with support from Farm Bureau, UTMC, Food City and Ford.

 

UT Athletics

Lee Brice, Justin Moore & Tyler Farr Help Raise $100,000 for Folds of Honor

Lee Brice, Justin Moore & Tyler Farr Help Raise $100,000 for Folds of Honor

Lee Brice, Justin Moore and Tyler Farr helped raise $100,000 for Folds of Honor, an organization that provides educational scholarships to families of military men and women who have fallen or have been disabled while on active duty in the U.S. armed forces.

In honor of Memorial Day on May 25, the aforementioned artists each performed a virtual concert on May 25, 26 and 27 as a part of the Folds of Honor Rock n Raise Virtual Concert Series. Viewers were able to donate via text or app to support Folds of Honor.

The newly formed Folds of Honor Tennessee Chapter will use the $100,000 to provide educational scholarships to Folds of Honor recipients.

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Midland Releases New 5-Song Acoustic EP, “Guitars, Couches, Etc., Etc.” [Listen to “Drinkin’ Problem”]

Midland Releases New 5-Song Acoustic EP, “Guitars, Couches, Etc., Etc.” [Listen to “Drinkin’ Problem”]

With a clever nod to one of their influences, Midland released a new five-song EP, Guitars, Couches, Etc., Etc., on May 29.

The new EP’s moniker pays homage to Dwight Yoakam’s 1986 debut album, Guitars, Cadillacs, Etc., Etc.

Midland—the trio comprised of Mark Wystrach, Cameron Duddy and Jess Carson—stripped down five songs from their catalogue for the acoustic EP, including current single, “Cheatin’ Songs,” as well as chart-topper “Drinkin’ Problem,” “Burn Out” and more.

“The title is a bit tongue in cheek with reference to a seminal album that largely influenced this band cut against the strange reality that we’ve all found ourselves living these last few months,” says Mark. “It was medicinal to pick these songs back up and re-interpret them in a new way both recording wise and in the arrangements and colorings. We hope you enjoy these new iterations as much as we did making em.”

Listen to “Drinkin’ Problem” below.

Guitars, Couches, Etc., Etc. Track List

1. “Fourteen Gears” (acoustic)
2. “Cheatin’ Songs” (acoustic)
3. “Fast Hearts and Slow Towns” (acoustic)
4. “Burn Out” (acoustic)
5. “Drinkin’ Problem” (acoustic)

photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com

Vol Network Classics: 2006 Tennessee-Georgia Airs Saturday at Noon

Vol Network Classics: 2006 Tennessee-Georgia Airs Saturday at Noon

Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee Volunteer fans will be treated to the 2006 Tennessee at Georgia football game in this weekend’s installment of Vol Network Classics across the state of Tennessee on participating Vol Radio Network affiliates.

The broadcast begins approximately at 12:20 p.m. ET/11:20 a.m. CT Saturday on WNML in Knoxville (AM 990, FM 99.1), utsports.com, the Tennessee Athletics App and at various times on Saturday on over 25 radio affiliates across the state of Tennessee. Check your local listings.

On a crisp fall night in Athens, Georgia on Oct. 7, 2006, the No. 13 Vols defeated the ninth-ranked Bulldogs, 51-33. Tennessee fell behind 24-7 late in the first half before mounting a miraculous comeback. The Vols scored 37 points after halftime against a Georgia defense that had allowed just 34 points total in its first five games, scoring on seven straight possessions. The Vols pulled away from a back-and-back forth offensive shootout with 27 points in the fourth quarter.

Tennessee quarterback Erik Ainge had a huge night going 25-of-38 passing for 268 yards with two touchdowns and one rushing touchdown. Future NFL star running back Arian Foster, who returned back for that game after an injury, scored three touchdowns. Receiver Robert Meachem had seven catches for 98 yards. Antonio Wardlow blocked and recovered a Georgia punt for big touchdown in the fourth quarter. Tennessee’s defense rebounded from sluggish first half to force four turnovers and keep the Bulldogs out of the end zone in the second half.

Bob Kesling, Tim Priest and Jeff Francis handle the Vol Radio Network broadcast. Special highlights and features include exclusive audio from the Tennessee locker room postgame. Vol Network Classics is presented by the East Tennessee Chevy Dealers and Hullco.

 

UT Athletics

Listen to Cam’s Dreamy New Single, “Redwood Tree”

Listen to Cam’s Dreamy New Single, “Redwood Tree”

Cam released a new single, “Redwood Tree,” on May 29.

Co-written by Cam, Tyler Johnson and Anders Mouridsen, “Redwood Tree” will be featured on Cam’s upcoming sophomore album, which is slated for release later this year. Cam was inspired to co-pen the song by the majestic trees she encountered as a child growing up in California.

“I grew up with a redwood tree in my backyard as my climbing tree,” says Cam. “I spent so many afternoons up there as a kid looking out and dreaming about the future. It feels like I’ve lived five lifetimes since then—I’ve done more than I can even remember, but still part of me wishes I could’ve stayed put, and to have that time at home. But you can’t be in two places at once and you couldn’t have known then what you know now. It’s a song about time, and whatever way you spend it still feels like just a blink to a redwood tree.”

Cam also released a new stop-motion video for “Redwood Tree” on May 29. Directed by Lior Molcho, the video is based off real stories and adventures from Cam’s life.

Watch Cam’s new video for “Redwood Tree” below.

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Watch Kip Moore’s New Documentary, “7 Days at the Rock,” in Celebration of New Album, “Wild World”

Watch Kip Moore’s New Documentary, “7 Days at the Rock,” in Celebration of New Album, “Wild World”

Kip Moore was the subject of a new mini-documentary, 7 Days at the Rock, which debuted on Outside TV on May 28.

The 26-minute film was released in conjunction with Kip’s fourth studio album, Wild World, which dropped on May 29. The short film follows Kip through some of his experiences in isolation at his remote rock climbing facility, BedRock, in Red River Gorge, Ky., as well as the weeks leading up to the release of Wild World.

The 13-song offering features 12 songs that Kip co-wrote, including lead singe, “She’s Mine,” which is currently No. 28 on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart after 37 weeks. In addition, Kip co-produced the album with David Garcia, Luke Dick and Blair Daly on select tracks.

“I know it’s an unsettling time for a lot of people right now, and so my hope is that this music can bring even just one person some peace,” says Kip. “I try to make music that reaches people in a pure sense—something that’s light and easy to carry with you, but 1,000 pounds of weight at the same time, and I think Wild World is just a depiction of what I see. Life is one crazy, wild ride. But it can be so simple if we look for the right things, and I think that is more important than ever right now.”

Kip’s new project follows his 2018 EP, Room to Spare: The Acoustic Sessions, and his 2017 studio album, Slowheart, which spawned hits “More Girls Like You” and “Last Shot.”

Watch 7 Days at the Rock below

Wild World Track List & Songwriters

1. “Janie Blu” (Dan Couch, Kip Moore)
2. “Southpaw” (Westin Davis, Kip Moore)
3. “Fire And Flame” (Cary Barlowe, Brett James, Kip Moore, Will Weatherly)
4. “Wild World” (Josh Miller, Kip Moore)
5. “Red White Blue Jean American Dream” (Jimi Bell, Barton Davies, Luke Dick, Philip Lammonds)
6. “She’s Mine” (Dan Couch, Kip Moore, Scott Stepakoff)
7. “Hey Old Lover” (Dan Couch, Kip Moore)
8. “Grow On You” (Blair Daly, Westin Davis, Kip Moore)
9. “More Than Enough” (David Garcia, Josh Miller, Kip Moore)
10. “Sweet Virginia” (Kip Moore, Manny Medina, Erich Wigdahl)
11. “South” (Adam Browder, Dan Couch, Manny Medina, Kip Moore, Dave Nassie, Erich Wigdahl)
12. “Crazy For You Tonight” (Blair Daly, Westin Davis, Kip Moore)
13. “Payin’ Hard” (Blair Daly, Westin Davis, Kip Moore)

photo by NCD

Watch Dolly Parton’s Inspiring New Video for “When Life Is Good Again”

Watch Dolly Parton’s Inspiring New Video for “When Life Is Good Again”

Country music icon Dolly Parton released a new quarantine-inspired song, “When Life Is Good Again,” on May 27.

Dolly’s serene voice opens the tune with, “When life is good again, I’ll be a better friend, A bigger person when, Life is good again, More thoughtful than I’ve been, I’ll be so different then, More in the moment when, Life is good again.”

Dolly debuted the song’s new video on May 28 during her interview on the Time 100 Talks. The live virtual event series convenes leaders from different disciplines to spotlight solutions to urgent global problems and encourage cross-disciplinary action.

“Since our world was forever changed by the COVID virus, I have felt a deep respect and appreciation for all of our frontline responders,” says Dolly. “This video is to pay respect to them and to remind all of us that this too shall pass. If we pull together as a community, we can rise above and look forward to more beautiful days on the horizon. I hope you love this song as much as I have loved bringing it to you.”

Watch Dolly’s new video for “When Life Is Good Again.”

photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com

Reba, Blake Shelton, Jason Aldean, Keith Urban, Zac Brown & More Join the “CMT Celebrates Our Heroes” TV Special

Reba, Blake Shelton, Jason Aldean, Keith Urban, Zac Brown & More Join the “CMT Celebrates Our Heroes” TV Special

CMT announced another round of performers and entertainers for its two-hour TV special, CMT Celebrates Our Heroes: An Artists of the Year Special, on June 3 at 7 p.m. CT.

Blake Shelton, Gary Sinise, Jake Owen, Jason Aldean, Keith Urban, Lee Brice, Olivia Munn, Reba McEntire, Scarlett Johansson, Sean Penn, Bobby Bones, Cody Alan and Zac Brown will join previously announce performers Brandi Carlile, Carrie Underwood, Darius Rucker, Kane Brown, Kristen Bell, Lauren Daigle, Luke Combs, Sam Hunt, Tim McGraw, Brothers Osborne, Florida Georgia Line, Kelsea Ballerini, Lady Antebellum, Little Big Town, Miranda Lambert and Thomas Rhett.

The special will feature one-of-a-kind tributes and performances as the stars perform from their own homes. The show will highlight stories of unsung heroes who have done exceptional things for their communities during the COVID-19 pandemic.

In words and music, participating artists will recognize the following categories of COVID-19 heroes: Healthcare, Education, Business, Community Leaders, Food Industry, Infrastructure, First Responders, U.S. Military and more.

CMT Celebrates Our Heroes: An Artists of the Year Special will air on June 3 at 7 p.m. CT on CMT, Paramount Network, Pop TV and TV Land.

The 2020 CMT Music Awards—originally slated for June 3—will take place on October 14. The fan-voted CMT Awards hand out trophies in a number of categories, including Video of the Year, Collaborative Video of the Year, Breakthrough Video of the Year and more.

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

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