Gameday Gameplan for Tennessee fans: Kentucky

It’s Gameday on Rocky Top, and the Tennessee Volunteers — currently 2-1, tied with Florida for second in the SEC East, and ranked No. 18 in the nation — look to bounce back after a disappointing loss to No. 3 Georgia last week. Today, the Vols host the Kentucky Wildcats in Neyland Stadium.

Here’s the Gameday Gameplan for Tennessee fans. Where and when to find the Tennessee-Kentucky game on TV, what other games to watch as well, and what to listen to and read as you wait for kickoff.

When is the Vols game, and what TV channel is it on?

Here are the particulars for today’s Tennessee game:

The best games for Vols fans to watch today

We Vols fans jump right into the deep end today, as the Vols’ game kicks off right at noon on the SEC Network. A couple of future opponents are in action in the afternoon slot, and then the big Top 5 matchup between Alabama and Georgia takes place at 8:00 on CBS. We’re rooting for the Tide here to give Georgia a loss.

Here’s our list of games to watch today, curated just for Big Orange fans:

Away Home Time TV How Why
NOON
#14 Auburn South Carolina 12:00 PM ESPN DVR Future opponent, former opponent
Kentucky #18 Tennessee 12:00 PM SECN Live Go Vols!
AFTERNOON
LSU #10 Florida POSTPONED
Ole Miss Arkansas 3:30 PM ESPN2 Channel Hop Future opponent
#11 Texas A&M Mississippi State 4:00 PM SECN Channel Hop Future opponent
EVENING
#3 Georgia #2 Alabama 8:00 PM CBS Live Former opponent, future opponent
Vanderbilt Missouri POSTPONED

And here’s a searchable version of this week’s entire college football TV schedule:

10/14/20 Coastal Carolina #21 Louisiana 7:30 PM ESPN
10/15/20 Georgia State Arkansas State 7:30 PM ESPN
10/16/20 #17 SMU Tulane 6:00 PM ESPN
10/16/20 #15 BYU Houston 9:30 PM ESPN
10/17/20 #1 Clemson Georgia Tech 12:00 PM ABC
10/17/20 #8 Cincinnati Tulsa POSTPONED
10/17/20 Pittsburgh #13 Miami 12:00 PM ACCN
10/17/20 #14 Auburn South Carolina 12:00 PM ESPN
10/17/20 Kentucky #18 Tennessee 12:00 PM SECN
10/17/20 Navy East Carolina 12:00 PM ESPN+
10/17/20 Texas State South Alabama 12:00 PM ESPNU
10/17/20 South Florida Temple 12:00 PM ESPN+
10/17/20 Liberty Syracuse 12:00 PM ACCNX
10/17/20 Kansas West Virginia 12:00 PM
10/17/20 Army UTSA 1:30 PM CBSSN
10/17/20 Western Kentucky UAB 1:30 PM
10/17/20 Louisville #4 Notre Dame 2:30 PM NBC
10/17/20 LSU #10 Florida POSTPONED
10/17/20 Duke NC State 3:30 PM ACCNX
10/17/20 UCF Memphis 3:30 PM ABC
10/17/20 Ole Miss Arkansas 3:30 PM ESPN2
10/17/20 #11 Texas A&M Mississippi State 4:00 PM SECN
10/17/20 Virginia Wake Forest 4:00 PM ACCN
10/17/20 UMass Georgia Southern 4:00 PM ESPNU
10/17/20 North Texas Middle Tennessee 5:00 PM CBSSN
10/17/20 Marshall Louisiana Tech 6:00 PM CBSSN
10/17/20 #5 North Carolina Florida State 7:00 PM ESPN
10/17/20 Eastern Kentucky Troy 7:00 PM ESPN3
10/17/20 #7 Oklahoma State Baylor POSTPONED
10/17/20 Vanderbilt Missouri POSTPONED
10/17/20 Southern Mississippi UTEP 7:30 PM ESPN2
10/17/20 #3 Georgia #2 Alabama 8:00 PM CBS
10/17/20 Boston College #23 Virginia Tech 8:00 PM ACCN
10/17/20 Florida International Charlotte 8:00 PM ESPNU

GRT games and contests

While you’re waiting for the games to begin, make sure that you submit your answers to the GRT Guessing Game questions and update your picks for the GRT Pick ‘Em.

GRT game-week audio

Here’s our podcast from earlier this week:

Pre-game prep

To catch up on your pre-game reading, have a look at our game preview posts from earlier this week:

Go Vols!

Praise, Blame, and Defense

The thing I keep coming back to most often – “Georgia’s defense is the best in the country” – is, of course, the most hopeful scenario. So maybe don’t trust it yet; trust it a lot if it shows up well against Alabama, which has the best offense in the country. Stay tuned next week when we get to try to solve that problem.

But by the end of the year, that’s the hope: Georgia’s defense is, in fact, not just the best in the nation, but the best we’ve seen in a while.

The last time we saw anything better, via SP+, was 2017 Alabama. (Mis)matched against the anemic Vol offense in Butch Jones’ final season, Tennessee went for 108 total yards at 2.35 yards per play, and zero offensive points. Before then, the last time Tennessee saw a defense who ended up in that neighborhood was 2012 Florida, Will Muschamp’s eventual Sugar Bowl team. The high-powered Vol offense scored 20 points, but had just 4.72 yards per play, their lowest total of the year before imploding at Vanderbilt.

The 2012 Gators ended the year at 6.6 (points allowed vs the average offense) in defensive SP+. 2017 Alabama finished at 5.6. Georgia was at 6.2 before playing the Vols, actually coming down a bit to 7.1.

The Vols gained 214 yards on Georgia last week at 3.40 yards per play. That’s clearly not going to get it done against an elite team, and is just as indicative of the outcome as turning the ball over three times in the second half.

As a result, Tennessee’s defense faced 77 plays, its second-highest total in the last two years. The Vols allowed 44 points (37 for Georgia’s offense), got hurt over the middle, and don’t come out of Athens carrying a world of confidence.

But when you put all the numbers on the table this season, and consider what’s happening around the rest of the league? Pick whichever one makes you feel best, because they both might still be true after the Georgia game:

  • Tennessee might have the second best defense in the SEC
  • Tennessee might have its best defense in 10+ years

In SP+, both are true right now. Georgia’s otherworldly defense leads the nation at 7.1 in SP+; Ohio State is number two at 14.1, a full seven points behind. The field gets more crowded from there, but among SEC defenses after three weeks and plenty of points:

TeamSP+ DefenseNational Rank
Georgia7.11
Tennessee17.313
Auburn1818
Florida19.420
Alabama19.822
South Carolina19.923
Missouri20.527
Kentucky21.228
Texas A&M21.629
LSU22.537
Arkansas26.358
Ole Miss27.765
Vanderbilt27.866
Mississippi St27.967

Tennessee’s defensive rating of 17.3 is a hair ahead of last season’s 17.4, spurred on by a fantastic defensive effort in the six-game winning streak to close 2019. That rating was Tennessee’s best of the decade, which isn’t overly shocking; the 2015 Vol defense came closest at 17.8. What is more shocking is the size of the gap between where the Vols are now and where we’ve been in the last few years:

SeasonSP+ Defense
200915.5
202017.3
201917.4
201517.8
201118.8
201419.9
201023.6
201625.2
201725.7
201326.1
201228.3
201828.9

In the post-Fulmer era, only Monte Kiffin’s 2009 unit faired better than last year, and this year’s potential. And, in the spirit of having a chance to win every week, that’s a group – 2015, 2019, 2009 – you want to be in. Much better than the company Tennessee’s defense kept in 2016-18.

So maybe we’re not ready to think of the 2020 Vol defense as elite, or even “very good”. But if the numbers hold weight, they’ll play their way into at least that second category.

Which brings us to Kentucky.

Fresh off gaining 157 total yards at 2.96 yards per play against Mississippi State – six interceptions, 24 points – the Cats head to Knoxville. Last year Kentucky scored 13 points against us, seven the year before that. In winning four straight after losing to us in 2019, Kentucky scored 38, 50, 45, and 37 points. In winning three straight after losing to us in 2018, Kentucky scored 34, 56, and 27. Jeremy Pruitt’s defense has done some of its very best work against Kentucky.

Tennessee’s offense has its own demons to exorcise, and I’m not sure how much of that will take place the next two weeks. But if Tennessee’s defense is simply as good as statistically and historically advertised? They can carry the day against a team like Kentucky. And along the way, might start getting a little more credit and higher expectations.

The Gameday on Rocky Top Guessing Game: 2020 Week 7

It’s Friday before Gameday, and that means it’s time for the Gameday on Rocky Top Guessing Game. If you’ve played before, you know the deal, and you can skip to the questions below. If not, catch up here.

Let’sa go!

  1. Submit your answers to our questions below.
  2. Click the “Submit” button.
  3. Copy and paste your answers in the comments below.

Good luck!

Tennessee-Kentucky, according to the GRT Statsy Preview Machine

Tennessee opened as a 6.5-point favorite over Kentucky this week, and the line has since moved to Tennessee -6. Here’s what the GRT Statsy Preview Machine thinks about that.

From the perspective of Tennessee

Each team has played three games in 2020, so the machine will only look at current year data.

  • Tennessee’s Scoring Offense: 29
  • Kentucky’s Scoring Offense: 26
  • Tennessee’s Scoring Defense: 27.7
  • Kentucky’s Scoring Defense: 24.3

Tennessee’s offense against Kentucky’s defense

Kentucky’s scoring defense of 24.3 is most similar to the following prior Tennessee opponent(s) (FBS only):

  • South Carolina 25.3
  • Georgia 12.3

In case you’re wondering like I was, Missouri’s an even worse comp than Georgia, as the Tigers’ scoring defense is currently 38.

Tennessee scored 21 points against Georgia and 31 points against South Carolina. Combined, that’s 138% of what those teams usually give up, so the estimated points for Tennessee against Kentucky is 33.6.

Kentucky’s offense against Tennessee’s defense

Kentucky’s scoring offense of 26 is most similar to the following prior Tennessee opponent(s) (FBS only):

  • Missouri 25.3
  • South Carolina 30.7

Tennessee allowed Missouri 12 points South Carolina 27 points, which combined is 70% of what those teams usually score. So the estimated points for Kentucky against Tennessee is 18.2.

Estimated score: Tennessee 33.6, Kentucky 18.2

From the perspective of Kentucky

Kentucky’s offense against Tennessee’s defense

Tennessee’s scoring defense of 27.7 is most similar to the following prior Kentucky opponent(s) (FBS only):

  • Mississippi State 26.3
  • Auburn 22.7

Kentucky scored 13 points against Auburn and 24 points against Mississippi State. Combined, that is 76% of what those teams usually give up. Estimated points for Kentucky against Tennessee: 21.

Tennessee’s offense against Kentucky’s defense

Tennessee’s scoring offense of 29 is most similar to the following prior Kentucky opponent(s) (FBS only):

  • Auburn 21.7
  • Mississippi State 20

Kentucky allowed 29 points to Auburn and 2 points to Mississippi State [FLAG!]. That’s 74% of what those teams usually score, which makes the estimated points for Tennessee against Kentucky: 21.5.

Estimated score: Kentucky 21, Tennessee 21.5

SPM Final Estimates

Combining the results from both perspectives, here’s what we get:

SPM Final estimated score: Tennessee 27.5, Kentucky 19.6

SPM Final estimated spread: Tennessee -7.9

Difference between the SPM and the Vegas opening spread: 1.4

That makes this yet another Category 1 game for the Statsy Preview Machine, meaning it’s not overly confident about its conclusion that Tennessee will cover because it is not far off from the Vegas spread.

Eyeball adjustments

The only thing that really jumps out at me from the above concerns Mississippi State’s offense as a comp for judging Kentucky’s defense. Leach’s Air Raid exploded onto the scene with 44 points against LSU. It was then immediately grounded with 14 points against Arkansas and 2 points against Kentucky. Also, LSU’s defense appears to be suspect, as it allowed 45 points to Missouri, a team that scored only 12 points against the Vols. Also also, Auburn scored more points against Kentucky than they usually get.

For those reasons, I am highly skeptical of Mississippi State as a reliable comp and thus the estimated points for Tennessee against Kentucky from Kentucky’s perspective. If we exclude Mississippi State as a comp, that leaves Ole Miss as the only other possible comp for this year. The Rebels’ scoring offense is 41.7, and they got 42 total points (35 in regulation) against the Wildcats. For regulation, that’s 84% of what they usually get. Combining that with the Auburn comps, those teams got essentially 100% of what they usually get, which would mean Tennessee would score what it usually does: 29. So, the estimated points for Tennessee against Kentucky from Kentucky’s perspective would be 29 instead of 21.5. That would make the Kentucky perspective Tennessee 29, Kentucky 21, and the cumulative result Tennessee 31.3, Kentucky 19.6. That would make Tennessee an 11.5-point favorite.

So, my eyeballs are raising their eyebrows at one component of the Statsy Preview Machine’s analysis and going instead with a predicted score of Tennessee 31, Kentucky 20. Both I and the Statsy Preview Machine agree, though, that the Vols should cover the 6- to 6.5-point spread this week.

Other predictions from other systems

Vegas has Tennessee as a 6- (current) to 6.5-point (opening) favorite. With an over/under of 46-49, that translates to something like Tennessee 27, Kentucky 21.

Bill Connelly’s SP+ likes Tennessee by 5.2 (Vols 27, Wildcats 22) and gives the Vols a 62% chance of winning. He’s using a 6-point spread and does not like the Vols to cover.

Bottom line

The GRT Statsy Preview Machine thinks the Vols will cover either the opening 6.5-point or the current 6-point spread. I do as well. But it’s close enough to not feel especially confident about it.

  • Vegas: Tennessee 27, Kentucky 21 (Vols -6 to -6.5)
  • SP+: Tennessee 27, Kentucky 22 (doesn’t cover)
  • GRT’s SPM: Tennessee 28, Kentucky 20 (covers)
  • Me: Tennessee 31, Kentucky 20 (covers)

Season results on Tennessee games

What do y’all think?

2020 GRT picks: Week 7

News flash: Spreads matter. We generally measure the GRT Statsy Preview Machine against the Vegas opening spreads, and although the machine has done well in the past, it’s only batting .500 so far this season. Last week was particularly bad: Against Vegas opening spreads, it went 11-16 (40.74%) overall, 3-7 (30%) in Category 2, and 1-3 (25%) in Category 3. For the season, the SPM is now 57-58 (49.57%) in Category 1, 25-24 (51.02%) in Category 2, and 11-11 (50%) in Category 3.

No big deal, it’s a weird season after all, right?

But the machine is tearing it up if you measure it against the same spreads that other systems are using. For instance, against the same spreads that SP+ measures against, our machine went 19-8 (70.37%) overall for the second week in a row last week. For the season against those spreads, it’s 70-45 (60.87%). So yeah, spreads matter.

SP+ went 11-16 (40.74%) against its spreads last week. It did slightly better against the same spreads we use (Vegas opening spreads), as it was 12-15 (44.44%). Against Vegas opening spreads for the season, it is still a killer 70-45 (60.87%).

Below are the GRT Statsy Preview Machine’s picks for Week 7 of the 2020 college football season. As always, if you’re wondering why we do this or what I mean when I refer to “confidence” and when I place game predictions into different categories, check out this post.

GRT SPM 2020 Week 7 Picks

Here’s what the machine is thinking this week:

There are five Category 3 games that the SPM likes particularly well this week.

What are you favorite games this week?

2020 College Football TV Schedule: Week 7

College football starts early this week with a game tonight between scrappy Coastal Carolina and No. 21 Louisiana. Old friends Georgia State take on Arkansas State tomorrow night, and Friday features a couple of ranked non-Power 5 teams in action on ESPN.

The Vols host Kentucky at noon on the SEC Network, and then there are five (Vanderbilt-Missouri got postponed) other SEC games to watch on Gameday, including the big one, No. 3 Georgia at No. 2 Alabama at 8:00 on CBS.

First up is this week’s college football TV schedule curated just for Vols fans. A full and searchable college football TV schedule for this week is below the curated version.

Wednesday, October 14, 2020

Away Home Time TV How Why
Coastal Carolina #21 Louisiana 7:30 PM ESPN Live It's football

Maybe?

Thursday, October 15, 2020

Away Home Time TV How Why
Georgia State Arkansas State 7:30 PM ESPN Live It's football

Go Panthers?

Friday, October 16, 2020

Away Home Time TV How Why
#17 SMU Tulane 6:00 PM ESPN Live It's football
#15 BYU Houston 9:30 PM ESPN Live It's football

Again, maybe?

Gameday, October 17, 2020

Away Home Time TV How Why
NOON
#14 Auburn South Carolina 12:00 PM ESPN DVR Future opponent, former opponent
Kentucky #18 Tennessee 12:00 PM SECN Live Go Vols!
AFTERNOON
LSU #10 Florida POSTPONED
Ole Miss Arkansas 3:30 PM ESPN2 Channel Hop Future opponent
#11 Texas A&M Mississippi State 4:00 PM SECN Channel Hop Future opponent
EVENING
#3 Georgia #2 Alabama 8:00 PM CBS Live Former opponent, future opponent
Vanderbilt Missouri POSTPONED

The main event for Vols fans is Tennessee taking on Kentucky at high noon on the SEC Network. But set your DVRs for the Auburn-South Carolina game, too, to get a look at how Auburn is doing against a former opponent of the Vols.

The afternoon slate will provide a look at three future Vols’ opponents in Florida, Arkansas, and Texas A&M.

The big game — future Vols’ opponent No. 2 Alabama and former Vols’ opponent No. 3 Georgia — gets an 8:00 kick on CBS. The Vanderbilt-Missouri game was postponed.

Full searchable college football TV schedule

Here’s the entire 2020 college football TV schedule for this week:

10/14/20 Coastal Carolina #21 Louisiana 7:30 PM ESPN
10/15/20 Georgia State Arkansas State 7:30 PM ESPN
10/16/20 #17 SMU Tulane 6:00 PM ESPN
10/16/20 #15 BYU Houston 9:30 PM ESPN
10/17/20 #1 Clemson Georgia Tech 12:00 PM ABC
10/17/20 #8 Cincinnati Tulsa POSTPONED
10/17/20 Pittsburgh #13 Miami 12:00 PM ACCN
10/17/20 #14 Auburn South Carolina 12:00 PM ESPN
10/17/20 Kentucky #18 Tennessee 12:00 PM SECN
10/17/20 Navy East Carolina 12:00 PM ESPN+
10/17/20 Texas State South Alabama 12:00 PM ESPNU
10/17/20 South Florida Temple 12:00 PM ESPN+
10/17/20 Liberty Syracuse 12:00 PM ACCNX
10/17/20 Kansas West Virginia 12:00 PM
10/17/20 Army UTSA 1:30 PM CBSSN
10/17/20 Western Kentucky UAB 1:30 PM
10/17/20 Louisville #4 Notre Dame 2:30 PM NBC
10/17/20 LSU #10 Florida POSTPONED
10/17/20 Duke NC State 3:30 PM ACCNX
10/17/20 UCF Memphis 3:30 PM ABC
10/17/20 Ole Miss Arkansas 3:30 PM ESPN2
10/17/20 #11 Texas A&M Mississippi State 4:00 PM SECN
10/17/20 Virginia Wake Forest 4:00 PM ACCN
10/17/20 UMass Georgia Southern 4:00 PM ESPNU
10/17/20 North Texas Middle Tennessee 5:00 PM CBSSN
10/17/20 Marshall Louisiana Tech 6:00 PM CBSSN
10/17/20 #5 North Carolina Florida State 7:00 PM ESPN
10/17/20 Eastern Kentucky Troy 7:00 PM ESPN3
10/17/20 #7 Oklahoma State Baylor POSTPONED
10/17/20 Vanderbilt Missouri POSTPONED
10/17/20 Southern Mississippi UTEP 7:30 PM ESPN2
10/17/20 #3 Georgia #2 Alabama 8:00 PM CBS
10/17/20 Boston College #23 Virginia Tech 8:00 PM ACCN
10/17/20 Florida International Charlotte 8:00 PM ESPNU

Tennessee-Kentucky: Head-to-head statistical rankings

Below is a look at Tennessee’s national stat rankings side-by-side with the counterpart rankings for the Kentucky Wildcats.

When the Vols have the ball

Link to table

Where’s the opportunity?

Sigh. Passing game?

Where’s the danger?

It looks like it’s going to be difficult to run against these guys, and it looks like our third down conversion problems aren’t going to get any better this week. Basically, Kentucky may not be up to Georgia’s level on defense, but Tennessee’s offense is going to have its hands full again this weekend.

Gameplan for the Vols on offense

Do better. Don’t turn the ball over. Hope the defense can carry the day.

Vols on defense

Link to table

Where’s the opportunity?

Okay, that’s better. The Vols appear to have a somewhat significant advantage on defense over Kentucky in most areas . . .

Where’s the danger?

. . . except in the run game and on third down. Also, Kentucky apparently doesn’t throw interceptions.

Gameplan for the Vols on defense

What I said against Georgia holds true in this game: Win first down. Get them off schedule to get an advantage on third down and then win third down. Any turnover in our favor will be really, really valuable.

Special teams

Link to table

The Vols appear to have the advantage on special teams.

Turnovers and penalties

Link to table

We’ve seen how much this can change in a week, so it’s hard to say whether either team has an actual advantage here. Just protect the ball and limit the penalties.

Expected Win Total Analysis: After Georgia

It’s Post-Game Monday, which means that it’s time to re-assess our expected win totals in light of what happened this past weekend. You can submit your own ballot at the GRT Expected Win Total Machine page.

My assessment

I’m writing this early Sunday morning, so what I’m writing may be a bit amplified by the proximity to yesterday’s disappointment.

My expected win total for this season is now 5.45.

Here’s how I’ve tracked this season:

  • Preseason: 5.4
  • After beating South Carolina: 5.8
  • After beating Missouri: No analysis, but would have gone up
  • After the loss to Georgia: 5.45

Details: I have Florida at 20%, Alabama at 25%, A&M and Auburn at 45%, Kentucky and Arkansas at 60%, and Vanderbilt at 90%.

Here’s a table with my expectations this week:

Tennessee Volunteers currently

Current record: 2-1, 2nd in the SEC East

I’m sure I’m no different than most Vols fans in that I was feeling pretty good about Tennessee after wins over South Carolina and Missouri. I didn’t think the Vols would beat Georgia, but I did think it wouldn’t feel like a replay of the past several years. In the first half, it didn’t feel like that, as the offense appeared to be doing just enough to hang with the Bulldogs and maybe even win and the defense was frustrating Georgia’s offense.

But Georgia’s superb defense was just too much in the second half, having its way with Tennessee’s talented offensive line over and over and over again while the Vols’ defense slowly gave out.

I’m cautioning myself not to overreact too much. Georgia is a national title contender, after all, and if Tennessee can still take care of business against the SEC East’s second tier, it still has plenty of opportunities (Alabama, Florida) to maybe get one of those elusive wins against elite teams. And even without that, there’s room to grow with additional opportunities against teams like A&M and Auburn that appear to be somewhere in between the elite and the SEC East’s second tier.

The question, of course, is whether I think any of that is actually reasonable. At this point, I do, although my certainty about it has waned significantly after this weekend.

Bottom line: I’m only slightly more concerned about the Vols themselves this week than I was last week.

The Vols’ future opponents

Kentucky Wildcats

Current record: 1-2, 4th in the SEC East

I’m feeling worse about the Kentucky Wildcats, and not just because they had six (!) interceptions this weekend. After watching Ole Miss score almost at will against Alabama last night, that one-point loss in overtime to the Rebels is looking pretty good as well. I’m moving them from 70% to 60%.

Alabama Crimson Tide

Current record: 3-0, 1st in the SEC West

Again, I’m not sure whether last night’s back-and-forth with Ole Miss is more credit to Lane Kiffin or concern about Alabama’s defense. For now, I’m splitting the difference on that. So, I’m feeling slightly better about Alabama this week. Sure, they also scored 63 points, but it’s beginning to become clear that Ole Miss can’t stop anybody so maybe that’s not quite as impressive as it seems. I’m moving the Tide from 20% to 25%.

Arkansas Razorbacks

Current record: 1-2, 4th in the SEC West

Arkansas would have beaten Auburn if not for a botched call that replay wasn’t able to overturn. I’m feeling much worse about these guys. They no longer seem like the Vanderbilt of the West; they look like either a member of the second tier in the SEC East or, gulp, like us. I’m moving them to 60% and just below Kentucky.

Texas A&M

Current record: 2-1, 2nd in the SEC West

A&M exposed Florida’s problems on defense. Whether that means they are finally now who we thought they were preseason, I don’t know. I do know that I feel worse about them today than I did two days ago. I’m moving them from 50% to 45%.

Auburn Tigers

Current record: 2-1, 2nd in the SEC West

See Arkansas above. Auburn lost this on a botched snap that Bo Nix then attempted to spike backward, basically making it a lateral. Arkansas recovered, but the refs on the field got it wrong, and the rules say that replay couldn’t correct it, probably because the whistle blew and players stopped playing. Still, the Tigers are dangerous. I’m feeling like these guys are essentially the same as Texas A&M, so I’m making both of them 45% and giving the Tigers the edge.

Vanderbilt Commodores

Current record: 0-3, 7th in the SEC East

See South Carolina above. No change in perception of the ‘Dores: 90%.

Florida Gators

Current record: 2-1, 2nd in the SEC East

See A&M above. I’m not sure whether to credit A&M for the win or be a little less concerned about the Gators because of their defense. Bottom line, I think I feel a little less concerned about them this week than last. That offense is really good, but yes, the defense does make them vulnerable. I’m keeping them at 20% and making them the most difficult game remaining due to dropping Alabama to 25%.

The Vols’ past opponents

South Carolina Gamecocks

Current record: 1-2, 4th in the SEC East

South Carolina basically did what it was supposed to do against Vanderbilt this week. That means no change in perception and no impact on perception of Tennessee for me.

Missouri Tigers

Current record: 1-2, 4th in the SEC East

Who knows whether Missouri beating LSU says more about Missouri or more about LSU? I feel maybe slightly better about Tennessee now that Missouri has beaten LSU, but I wonder if LSU is just as much of a mess as I thought they would be preseason. Of course, I also thought the Georgia offense would struggle and I appear to have been wrong about that, so maybe Missouri deserves more credit than I’m giving them.

Georgia

Current record: 3-0, 1st in the SEC East

We’ll see how Georgia does against Alabama next week. I really thought their offense would struggle more this season and that Tennessee’s offensive line would be closer to an even match against that defense than it turned out to be.

What about you? Where are your expectations for the Vols now? You can post your current thoughts and details here, but don’t forget to submit your ballot to the GRT Win Total Machine.

Tennessee Vols statistical ranking trends – After Week 6

Here’s our weekly color-coded look at how the Vols’ national rankings are trending in each of the official NCAA stat categories. The word of warning continues this week: With the pandemic causing conferences and teams to start their respective seasons at different times, what used to rank 130 or so teams is currently ranking only 75.

Offense

If the table above doesn’t display well, try using this link.

Currently doing well: Passes had intercepted, 4th down conversion percentage, tackles for loss allowed, red zone offense, completion percentage

Took a hit this week: Rushing offense fell all the way from No. 24 to No. 66, sacks allowed fell from No. 31 to No. 60, and passing yards per completion went from No. 26 to No. 48

Currently needs improvement: 3rd down conversion percentage, rushing offense, total offense, sacks allowed, first downs offense, passing offense

Defense

If the table above doesn’t display well, try using this link.

Currently doing well: Defensive TDs, first downs defense, 4th down conversion percentage defense

Took a hit this week: First downs offense went from No. 10 to No. 26, scoring defense went from No. 17 to No. 37. Total defense and rushing defense also fell this week.

Improved this week: 4th down conversion percentage defense

Currently needs improvement: With only about 75 teams ranked, No. 50 and below would qualify as the basement in this exercise, and even after playing Georgia, the Vols are not there in any given defensive category, which is good.

Special Teams

If the table above doesn’t display well, try using this link.

Currently doing well: Punt returns, punt return defense, net punting, kickoff returns

Took a hit this week: Kickoff return defense

Improved this week: Net punting and punt return defense

Currently needs improvement: Kickoff return defense

Turnovers and Penalties

If the table above doesn’t display well, try using this link.

Currently doing well: Turnovers lost, which, after losing three to Georgia tells you how much of an aberration that was so far in this early season. Also, fumbles recovered.

Took a hit this week: Everything in the penalty department. The Vols were all green heading into this game and ended up committing 10 penalties for 84 yards.

Improved this week: Fumbles recovered. Hurray for small sample sizes.

Appears to need improvement: Nothing is terrible here, but the Vols certainly lost their edge in both penalties and turnovers this week against the Bulldogs.