Tennessee Vols 2018 Recruiting Class: Early Signing Day Offensive Capsules

Tennessee’s 2018 recruiting class was looking rough for a while after Butch Jones was fired, the prior administration — led by rogue athletic director John Currie — botched hiring his replacement and Alabama defensive coordinator Jeremy Pruitt was brought in to be UT’s new head coach.

In nine days, the man who has orchestrated a championship-caliber defense in Tuscaloosa and helped build a recruiting machine that leads to top class after top class salvaged an early signing period of which Vols fans could be proud.

This 2018 haul was never going to be a highly ranked group after Jones left, and it especially wasn’t after Pruitt severed ties with nearly half that class. But the guys he ultimately brought in surged UT nearly 40 spots in the rankings.

Work remains to make this class strong, but there are time — and spots remaining — to do it. Currently, Tennessee has the nation’s 27th-ranked recruiting class according to the 247Sports Composite. Needless to say, that’s not great. But it won’t end up that way. Pruitt still has some targets who could help the Vols reach a class that will wind up from 12-15 potentially.

Yes, losing offensive tackle Cade Mays (Georgia), safety Trey Dean (Florida) and quarterback Adrian Martinez (Nebraska) hurt. But the gains were good, too. Let’s take a look at UT’s 13 early offensive signees.

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Alontae Taylor 6’0″, 184-pound 4-star wide receiver; Manchester, Tenn. (Coffee County Central HS)

It was a topsy-turvy recruitment for Taylor, who flipped from Vanderbilt to Tennessee early in the recruiting process but enjoyed recruiting, listening to other programs who came calling. Many of those extended offers, and Georgia seemed to be the biggest threat in the end.

After he decommitted, Taylor gave Pruitt the opportunity to re-recruit him and became the new coach’s first commitment after visiting Knoxville the first weekend Pruitt was onboard. Alabama recruited him to play defensive back, so Taylor wanted to verify he’d be a receiver at UT. Once that happened, he was back on board.

That’s big news for Tennessee. Taylor is the type of athlete with the “suddenness” UT lacks on that side of the ball. He played quarterback in high school, so he’s used to having the ball in his hands, and while he may need a little polish catching the ball, he’s a terror in space. Blessed with great quickness and football speed, Taylor almost certainly will have a role in this offense early. He was the biggest senior playmaker in the state.

 

Dominick Wood-Anderson 6’5″, 245-pound 4-star JUCO tight end; Yuma, Ariz. (Arizona Western College)

Few JUCO prospect had as much drama surrounding his recruitment as Wood-Anderson, who is the nation’s top junior college player at his position. He was thought to be a huge Alabama lean and commitment for a long time, and Pruitt wasn’t his lead recruiter with the Tide, either.

But when Pruitt came on in Knoxville, he desperately needed an impact tight end. Currently, the Vols have Latrell Bumphus (who is perhaps better-suited for defense), as well as Austin Pope and former walk-on Eli Wolf. That’s basically it. Though UT had a commitment in Knoxville (Farragut) Jacob Warren, he needs about 30-40 pounds to be able to survive in the SEC. So, the Vols needed an impact player who could step right in and take the snaps vacated by departing seniors Ethan Wolf and Jakob Johnson.

DWA is a big, athletic prospect who can catch the ball and do things with the football after the catch. He reminds me a little of Mychal Rivera, who left UT and has enjoyed a decent NFL career. Brian Niedermeyer deserves a ton of credit for getting DWA on campus, and Pruitt deserves a ton for getting him signed.

Let’s hope this Tennessee staff is better at utilizing tight ends than Alabama.

 

Jerome Carvin 6’4″, 330-pound 4-star offensive lineman; Memphis, Tenn. (Cordova HS)

Losing long-time UT commit and Vol legacy Cade Mays hurts, especially to division rival Georgia. But Pruitt was able to salvage some of the in-state beef when he swooped in and convinced Carvin to come to Knoxville. That’s a major win for a prospect wanted by the prior staff as well as many as the top programs in the country.

The Vols were able to get him to sign despite him not visiting the final week before the early signing period. He chose UT over Mississippi State and Florida, where he’d developed a relationship with new coach Dan Mullen when he was in Starkville. Had Mullen stayed with the Bulldogs, it would have been an uphill battle for Tennessee to get him.

As it turned out, the Vols not only wanted him but also his teammate, 3-star running back Jeremy Banks, who was a 4-star on some services. Carvin also has a relationship with Smith and Drew Richmond, so that was a bonus for the Vols, too.

Carvin is a big, ol’ mean lineman who is country strong. He needs to be coached, taught technique, and he certainly needs to work on his drops, spacing and hand placement. But he has violent hands and a strong first push. He is the type of player who should be easy to teach, and though he probably projects as an interior lineman, the Vols need help everywhere on the offensive front, so he’s got the opportunity to step in and play.

It would be better for UT, however, if the Vols could sign a slew of JUCO offensive linemen to build depth right away and allow guys like Carvin to either play in a reserve role or to redshirt.

 

Jeremy Banks 6’2″, 215-pound 3-star running back; Memphis, Tenn. (Cordova HS)

How in the world is a power runner like Banks from your own state not recruited to come to Tennessee when teams like Florida, Nebraska, UCLA and others wanted him on their team?

Butch Jones, ladies and gentlemen.

Pruitt identified him early on, and it wasn’t as a package-deal situation to get Carvin, either. Banks deserved a scholarship in his own rights, and the Vols needed a power back of his ilk with John Kelly entering his senior season. Tennessee already has speedier backs such as Ty Chandler, Carlin Fils-Aime and Tim Jordan, but the Vols need a guy who can get between the tackles and carry the load. Banks looks like the dude to do it.

He’s already big, and that’s before he gets in a college weight program. Pruitt wants to add another power back in this class, too, but Banks provides a need right away with some beef running behind what is expected to be a much bigger offensive line in 2018. It looks like Pruitt and offensive coordinator Tyson Helton (not to mention offensive line coach Will Friend) want to get back to the power running game (PRAISE GOD!) at Tennessee and get away from all this finesse crap. That’s music to my ears.

Banks is a pivotal piece of that. He doesn’t have breakaway speed, but he has strength, power, size and looks like the ideal type of running back for this system.

 

JT Shrout 6’3″, 190-pound 3-star pro-style quarterback; Newhall, Calif. (William S. Hart HS)

Once Adrian Martinez decided he was going to flip from Tennessee to Nebraska, the Vols were going to have to take a project at quarterback in this class. To be fair, though, Martinez was far from a “sure thing” considering he missed his entire senior season after suffering an injury. The Pruitt regime also severed ties with Florida quarterback Michael Penix, who wound up inking with Indiana and former UT coordinator Mike DeBord.

Meanwhile, Tennessee went fishing for a high-upside quarterback, and it didn’t take the Vols long to reach out to a vital target. It didn’t take long for Shrout to reciprocate the love, either.

The long-time California commitment left his homestate for a weekend visit to Knoxville the week before he was to sign. When he dropped his location via Twitter, UT’s fan base was all over him, trying to get him to come to play for the Vols. He fell in love with the area, decommitted from the Bears shortly after returning home and decided to be Tennessee’s quarterback in this class.

Yes, it’s a major red flag that Shrout threw 25 interceptions as a senior, but he has all the tools. Blessed with good size, excellent arm strength, adequate touch and sharp mechanics, he wowed scouts at a camp prior to his senior season. While it’s obvious he has to learn how to better read defenses, Shrout doesn’t need to step right in and start with Jarrett Guarantano, Quinten Dormady and Will McBride already on campus. If he is molded by Tyson Helton and is a quick study, he’ll have every opportunity to battle for that job.

 

Jacob Warren 6’6″, 211-pound 3-star tight end; Knoxville, Tenn. (Farragut HS)

Pruitt told Warren upon their meeting that — in so many words — he wouldn’t stand a chance in the rugged SEC unless he added weight. Thankfully for Warren, he has a very projectable frame and should be able to do that rather quickly. He needs to, and the Vols need him to.

As noted in the DWA blurb, Tennessee doesn’t have a lot of depth at the position, and Helton’s offense requires at least one (and sometimes two) quality tight ends. Warren looks like the type of athlete who can develop into a great player on the next level. He’s big and possesses great hands and has a knack for big plays. He’s just SO. DANG. SKINNY. He was used as a pass-catching tight end for the Admirals, and that’s the role he’ll fill at UT.

But if he’s on the field in 2018, it’s because Tennessee is in desperate need of bodies, Warren packed on some pounds or a combination of both. If there was ever a guy who needed a year to get bigger and stronger, it’s Warren. But this is a great local kid who has a future in an offense that will actually know how to utilize him.

Warren is one of those commitments you have to put on the top shelf and wait a while, but it’s like Christmas morning when he finally blossoms.

 

Tanner Antonutti 6’5″, 260-pound 3-star offensive tackle; Nashville, Tenn. (Ensworth HS)

Another player who needs a year to get in the weight room, get bigger and get stronger is Antonutti, a guy who wasn’t a for-sure take under the previous regime. Once LSU decided it wanted the Ensworth product, however, the Vols offered, too. Then, the long-time UT fan committed to the Vols and actually stuck with his pledge, unlike some other instate linemen.

The Vols will eventually be glad he did. Antonutti is one of the most athletic linemen in the entire class, and once he puts on 35-40 pounds, he will possess the kind of athleticism and skills to be a strong tackle. When you watch film on Antonutti, what stands out is how strong he is despite not having the weight of other linemen. He’s also very athletic and loves the Vols. Kentucky, Missouri, Virginia Tech, Mississippi State and others also saw those assets in Antonutti.

He played tight end and defensive line for Ensworth and was a finalist for the Mr. Football award, so his athleticism is noted. If he packs on weight and continues to develop, he has the chance to be a big part of the future of the offensive line — just most likely not in 2018.

 

Ollie Lane 6’5″, 307-pound 3-star offensive lineman; Corryton, Tenn. (Gibbs HS)

Lane is another Tennessee fan who ultimately chose to stick with his commitment to the nearby Vols. He was coveted by Georgia, Virginia Tech, Ole Miss, Mississippi State and others. He looks like an ideal player to slide in and play center in the future for the Vols, though it wouldn’t be a surprise if he wound up at guard, too.

Lane is a burly lineman who looks like a strong candidate to provide depth to the interior of Tennessee’s line. Just how much does it mean to Lane to play for the Vols? He told 247Sports’ Danny Parker that inking with UT “means the world to me.” That’s the kind of kid you want to sign, who will do what it takes to make the body changes and time commitment to be great.

Lane needs to add strength and needs to learn from Friend when it comes to technique, but he has a lot of positive assets that should make him a strong candidate to take over on the inside and battle Riley Locklear, among others, for that starting center spot. Lane has put on some 20-plus pounds in the past year to prepare to play in the SEC.

It’s going to be interesting to see if any of these youngsters on the offensive front are ready to help right away.

Tennessee 24, Southern Miss 10: Finally, a Win

 

None of Tennessee’s off-field drama carried over between the lines in Saturday night’s 24-10 homecoming win over Southern Mississippi.

So much for the #EmptyNeyland campaign, too. There were more than 95,000 people in Neyland Stadium to watch the Vols beat the Mustard Buzzards, er, Golden Eagles. Yes, it was just a two-touchdown win over a Conference USA Team, but any win for a 4-5 team should feel good.

It isn’t going to change any of the lingering big-picture frustrations, and, given Missouri’s 45-16 win at home over Florida on Saturday prior to hosting the Vols next week, it may not change the ultimate fruitless outcome of the season, but a win is a win is a win.

The best fans in the country were treated to a victory. That’s all that needs to be said tonight. Save the grumpiness for tomorrow.

A skeleton crew of Vols who were down to five scholarship offensive linemen after a few injuries during the game and who were forced to rip the redshirt off once fourth-string quarterback Will McBride reached deep down and pulled out a strong defensive performance to get their first win since a 17-13 escape over UMass back on September 23 that felt like a loss.

Thank goodness.

Listen: Everybody deals with adversity in different ways. For me, it’s snark, as you’ve probably seen on my Twitter account the past few weeks in trying to cope with the baffling fifth season of the Butch Jones tenure. Some people quit [as we know all too well at UT]. Others go extreme and pull for losses. Still, others elect to give up or lash out with meanness that is unnecessary.

Whatever is going to happen with the Jones tenure is going to happen. Most likely, the decision already has been made. Regardless, your 140 characters won’t make a difference. In reality, a win over Southern Miss likely won’t make much of one, either, but it may delay the inevitable another week.

It may not, depending on investigations and nasty endings and witch hunts and reasons to look for cause.

Ultimately, that’s none of our decisions to make.

But for the players remaining on the field Saturday night, they responded to adversity with a victory. They sang Rocky Top. A few players even did backflips. These kids didn’t care that they beat a team they were supposed to beat. They won again. That’s all that mattered. Good for them with all the crap they’ve had to endure.

There were more than a few smiles on the sideline, which was nice to see after a week filled with the Brett Kendrick concussion drama and the abrupt departure of Vol for Life coordinator Antone Davis, who inserted his own parting shots at Jones on his way out the door.

The players deserve better than what they’ve endured this year, and the fans deserve better, too. Saturday was better. Even if it only meant going from three wins to four wins and inching closer to bowl eligibility with games remaining against Missouri, LSU and Vanderbilt.

None of those games look easy, and UT should probably be underdogs in all three. If you’re in the camp of wanting the Vols to lose to force Jones’ ouster, well, first of all, shame on you. Secondly, you’ll probably still get your wish. So, let those of us who pull for Tennessee to win every game be happy for a night.

What happened on the field against the Golden Eagles didn’t change anything. The Vols are still bad; possibly the worst team in the SEC. They are still 0-5 in the league, which is still unacceptable. Though the defense looked better, it was against a C-USA team that has been far from prolific. Though Vols quarterback Jarrett Guarantano looked OK while he was in there, an ankle injury forced him out and McBride in. The true freshman backup looked about like you’d expect him to.

McBride finished 1-of-8 passing for 13 yards. He had four carries for 7 yards. Tennessee couldn’t manufacture first downs with him in there and limped out the win, which probably was only possible because the defense made some momentum-swinging plays like an Emmanuel Moseley interception and a Darrell Taylor-forced fumble recovered by Rashaan Gaulden.

If you’re a football dermatologist looking for the team’s warts, there are still plenty. The only thing the game against USM did was give us that old time feeling of winning again, and on homecoming, no less.

I don’t know how Tennessee is going to even field a team over the next few weeks, there are so many injuries. The SEC Network reported that Evan Berry was carted off the field at halftime [But, hey! At least we got to see him return one last kick to near midfield to set up a game-opening touchdown!]. Jonathan Kongbo was suspended for a violation of team rules, and, in this day and age of endless Tennessee drama, who knows what he did? Guarantano didn’t return in the second half after trying to play, and the offensive line was forced to ask for numerous snaps from a 275-pound converted tight end in Devante Brooks who hadn’t played a snap of organized football in a game since his sophomore year of high school.

It isn’t so much raining in Knoxville as coming a tornado with neck-deep water already on the ground.

Now, they’ve got to travel to Columbia to take on a Mizzou team that left the ranks of the winless in conference play on Saturday by throwing up 45 on a Gators team that, even though they beat the Vols, are in the same boat as the Vols.

After that, an LSU team that played hard in Tuscaloosa before predictably succumbing. Then, the Vols will play Vanderbilt, and let’s all hope they can find a way to win that one.

There’s no reason to think anything about a rosy future even though Tennessee won Saturday night. There are too many remnants of what we currently are to change anybody’s long-term thoughts about the direction of the program under Jones.

But Saturday night was about winning another football game. It was about McBride’s redshirt not being burned in vain. It was about Brooks playing well though he’s far from in SEC shape yet. It was about the much-maligned Moseley getting an important interception to win a game during his senior year. It was about John Kelly coming back from a one-game suspension to rush for a pair of touchdowns.

For some of you, it’s about Jones failing to coach great and seize the win as much as Southern Miss giving the Vols the game with mistakes. For others, it’s about you [rightly] questioning offensive coordinator Larry Scott failing to give Ty Chandler more than 11 touches after answering “God, yes” when asked if he needed to get his hands on the ball more. [In Scott’s defense, Chandler struggled behind the makeshift offensive line with just 15 yards]. For others still, it’s about potentially keeping Jones for yet another week when you just want finality to his era.

I understand all that. I’m in both camps. I’m happy with the win but mad about the season. I’m encouraged about the response from the remnants of an SEC team with the knowledge that this team likely isn’t going to win an SEC game unless it plays much better than it has over the past month-plus. I want another coach and another direction, but I still can’t help but root for Jones to make the right calls from the sideline while he’s on the sideline and for the kids to make the plays to win the game.

Saturday night, they won the game. Weeping remains in this dreadful 2017 season. So does gnashing of teeth. For a night, just be happy.

Tennessee’s Locks & Keys Week 9: The Kentucky Cure?

 

It has been 14 quarters since Tennessee’s offense crossed the goal line. That was more than a month ago in a narrow win over UMass that marks the last time this Vols team won a football game.

Now, Tennessee has released a statement this week that its only offensive star — running back John Kelly — is suspended for Saturday night’s game against Kentucky after being cited alongside freshman linebacker Will Ignont for possession.

Only once in the past 32 years have the Kentucky Wildcats found a winning formula against the Vols. This year, they’re 5-2 and playing against a team that is struggling so badly that fans are just counting down the moments left in coach Butch Jones’ tenure as Tennessee’s head coach.

These are rocky times on Rocky Top. But there have been fewer welcome sights in the history of Tennessee football than the sight of Kentucky coming up on the schedule. The Wildcats are a better team than Tennessee right now, but they’ve been anything but world-beaters themselves. Last weekend, UK took to the road to play Mississippi State and limped away with the same 45-7 deficit UT suffered against once-rival Alabama.

It was similarly ugly.

Now, the Wildcats are home in Lexington against a 3-4 Tennessee team that looks like a bowl game is anything but a guarantee. What’s going to happen? We’ll talk about that in a little bit, but first of all, let’s take a look back at last week’s keys and why UT lost to Alabama.

  • Petition the SEC to let UT play 14 players at once on both sides: Obviously, this didn’t happen. The Vols played with 11 on both sides, and Alabama’s 11 were much, much, much, much [insert infinity here], much better. FAIL.
  • Hurts (not) so good: Jalen Hurts didn’t have the best game of his career, but he was more than good enough, going 13-for-21 passing for 198 yards and a touchdown. He played a little more than a half. FAIL.
  • Four turnovers: The Vols got two, scored off one and nearly scored off the other. Was far from enough. FAIL.
  • Berry merry return game: He didn’t play. FAIL.
  • Game of their life: Naw. Alabama out-gained UT on offense 604-108. If this was the game of the Vols’ lives, the rest of the season is going to be hideous. FAIL.

KEYS

Put Snell in a shell

The Wildcats are a paltry 10th in the SEC in rush offense, and after such a promising freshman season, Benny Snell Jr. is averaging barely more than 4 yards per carry. That’s not good. The Vols have been awful against the run this season but very, very good against the pass.

That’s going to pit strength-vs.-strength with Stephen Johnson and UK’s passing game. But Snell is a major key. He’s good enough to dominate a game if the Vols let him, and so defensive coordinator Bob Shoop must find a way to shut him down. In the second half of the South Carolina game — a game that should have been a UT win — Gamecocks third-string running back A.J. Turner took over the game and led Carolina to a win. So, yeah, it’s happened.

Get Guarantano Going

There aren’t enough negative adjectives in the universe to describe Tennessee’s offense. It’s like if Dave Clawson’s 2008 Vols offense played every game against the 1985 Chicago Bears.

But if there’s ever going to be a game where redshirt freshman quarterback Jarrett Guarantano gets going, it’s going to be against the SEC’s worst pass defense. That comes this weekend, and if the Vols can’t take advantage of it, they may not score an offensive touchdown the rest of the year.

Game-changers

We talked about it last week, and we’ll continue to talk about it until the Vols actually do something productive on offense: Tennessee absolutely must get game-breaking plays on defense and special teams. Last weekend, Daniel Bituli had a 97-yard interception return for a touchdown in the Vols only score of the game. They got another fumble recovery on a fumble on a punt return, and UT took it down to the 1-inch line before failing to get across the goal line.

Is dynamic returner Evan Berry going to play? We all thought he would against Alabama, and it didn’t happen. If he does, it would be nice for UT if he took one to the house. The Vols need to get some turnovers and turn them into touchdowns to pull out a road win.

The Tim and Ty Show

There weren’t many bright spots at all against Alabama, but the Vols looked like freshmen running backs Ty Chandler and Tim Jordan had the speed to be difference-makers in any offense that didn’t just run sideways and go out of bounds.

With Kelly out, both will get their share of touches this weekend. The Vols need them to get to the second level and beyond. Kentucky’s defense isn’t awful, but it isn’t fast. This could be one of those games where Chandler or Jordan breaks free to the second level and is gone.

Vaca

Let’s face it: The Vols haven’t been in friendly confines in a while. Last weekend, UT spent a terrible time in Tuscaloosa. With all the buzz around Jones’ job security, Knoxville probably hasn’t been rosy, either.

Few hate the Vols like they do in Lexington, but Tennessee is probably going to be happy to be away from the glare of the spotlight of negativity in Knoxville. They need to band together and play up to their capabilities.

LOCKS

Last week was a little disappointing. I felt great about six games, and OK about two. When the smoke cleared, I went 4-4, including two frustrating stunners. West Virginia absolutely collapsed at Baylor and was fortune to beat the Bears 38-36 after allowing 25 unanswered points. That cost me a sure cover. SMU pooped its pants in a narrow win over Cincinnati where it easily should have covered if not for all the mistakes.

The other two losses were just flat-out losses. Oklahoma didn’t cover 12.5 against Kansas State and was fortunate to win. Purdue went from being sure money all week to getting outright beat by Rutgers 14-12.

The wins were solid. Syracuse easily covered 17 points in a loss to Miami, Central Florida took care of business against Navy, South Florida handled Tulane and Georgia Tech walloped Wake Forest. So, we stayed three games over .500 and now sit at 30-27-1.

It’s gonna be better this week. Guaranteed.

  1. Tennessee/Kentucky under 46:  I feel as good [bad?] about this one as I have all season. The Vols are worse than they’ve ever been on offense, and the defense is playing pretty well. This game has 20-14 written all over it.
  2. Louisville -2.5 over Wake Forest: You never know which Cardinals team is going to show up, but the Demon Deacons can’t do anything with Lamar Jackson. They aren’t fast enough.
  3. Appalachian State -3 over UMass. The Minutemen are going to have to do more than hang with the Vols and destroy lowly Georgia Southern to impress me. ASU coach Scott Satterfield always has his team up to play, and the Minutemen can’t ever hang with teams that have winning records.
  4. Arizona State +3 over USC: This line surprises me. The Trojans aren’t playing well, this game is in Tempe and Arizona State is playing very good football lately. Bet the money line here; the Sun Devils win outright.
  5. Arizona +3 over Washington State: Again, I was so totally wrong about the Wildcats. Who could envision quarterback Khalil Tate coming in and transforming this offense into being elite? This game in Tucson is going to be fun.
  6. Florida Atlantic -6.5 over Western Kentucky: The way Lane Kiffin has this Owls offense going, I’m riding them, even against a great quarterback like Mike White.
  7. Kansas State -24.5 over Kansas: Always bet against the Jayhawks. Always.
  8. Texas A&M Pickem vs. Mississippi State: The Bulldogs have been a much different team away from Davis Wade. I believe in what Kevin Sumlin is doing with the Aggies. They’ll win at home.

Alabama 45, Tennessee 7: This is Not OK

 

Remember when there was such a thing as Tennessee Pride?

Now, it’s just sausage.

Our hopes have been ground up yet again. We were reduced to hoping for moral victories against Alabama, just wanting the Vols to cover the spread. Or, in some extreme cases, wanting a lopsided margin “for the betterment of the program” that results in head coach Butch Jones getting fired. It’s not the way you want to spend a season.

What we got Saturday was embarrassment yet again in a spread-covering, lopsided 45-7 win by Alabama that saw them rest starting quarterback Jalen Hurts for almost the entire second half.

They didn’t need him. Tennessee’s offense wasn’t scoring a single touchdown, much less overcoming what was then a 28-0 deficit.

Ho-hum. The only thing that happened was what was expected all along.

The only threat for a marquee opponent playing UT these days is a potential injury. The Vols have been reduced to back-page news.

There was once a time, seems like centuries ago, when Tennessee and Alabama played to epic duals. Legends were forged under the haze of cigar smoke on the Third Saturday in October. The nation tuned in. Polls were affected. Championships won.

That’s still happening these days. Unfortunately for the Vols, it’s only happening for Nick Saban and the Crimson Tide.

What was once considered a rivalry is now just another speed bump on the highway to More Important Games for UA. There are plenty of those these days for Alabama, which is now on an 11-game winning streak over a Tennessee team that, again in Year 5 of Butch Jones’ tenure, looks like a helicopter dropped it right back in the wilderness where the Vols wandered for years in the final few of Phillip Fulmer, the eventful-but-unfruitful 2009 hiccup of Lane Kiffin and the entire Derek Dooley era.

When the Vols seemingly punched in the football for a John Kelly touchdown to make it look a tiny bit more respectable in the fourth quarter against the Tide on Saturday, there was at least a glimmer of something upon which to build. Instead, replays showed Kelly was short. Then Trey Smith jumped for a false start, Kelly ran for a short gain and Jarrett Guarantano threw an interception.

Ladies and gentlemen, your 2017 Tennessee Volunteers!

They’ve still not scored an offensive touchdown now in 14 quarters dating back to the second 15 minutes of the UMass game. That was 28 days ago. The only blip on the scoreboard against the Tide was a 97-yard interception return by backup linebacker Daniel Bituli.

That made the score 28-7. And, guess what? You cheered. You maybe even stood up. It was exciting. I did.

That’s just sad.

I live in Alabama, and I care more about this game than any other game in any other sport, and I can’t get excited for it anymore. You can talk all you want to about Saban’s dominance and all the championships the Tide have won and the machine that has been built in Tuscaloosa. All of that is viable and true.

But it isn’t the reason why Tennessee is now a laughingstock.

The day started with Tim Tebow — TIM FREAKING TEBOW — giving the Vols a back-handed pep talk on a morning college football show. Listening to Gary Danielson and Brad Nessler attempt to pay UT compliments on national television sound like trying to judge Charlie Weis in a beauty contest.

It isn’t OK what this program now is in Jones’ fifth year. Something has to change. I’m not sure about how much money Tennessee saves depending on when the timing of the decision is, but every single weekend, we have to sit in our chairs, turn on college football shows and hear every single commentator talk about how bad Tennessee is, how Butch has lost the team and how the Vols have to make a change.

None of us WANTED this, but then we watch the Vols play actual football [or something vaguely resembling it] and you see that it really has to happen. You can’t worry about recruiting, because, now, the only things that truly matter are player development and game day coaching. Neither of which are happening the way they should within the program right now.

There are two elite teams in the SEC: Alabama and Georgia. Tennessee has lost to those teams a combined 86-7. That isn’t getting closer to being competitive. It’s simply called regression.

There are two other mid-level teams the Vols have played within their division, and they lost to Florida and South Carolina on the final plays of the game. As the rest of the season unfolds, there will be more losses. So, it’s a matter of when you make the ultimate decision and how much money the powers that be will spend to make this program great again.

For those who didn’t watch this game or are just seeing the scores run across the bottom of the screen, Saturday’s 45-7 loss to Alabama looks like the embarrassing blowout that it indeed was. But there are players at UT; there are puzzle pieces who just need to be molded, coached, developed, disciplined.

Shawn Shamburger hasn’t hardly played at all this year, and he looked aggressive on Saturday in his first career start, getting beat his share of times but flashing a lot, too. Bituli still can’t stay on the field all the time even though UT’s defense is so much better with him on it. We still have him three more years. Somebody just needs to help him realize the unlimited, NFL potential he has.

John Kelly is a warrior. Guarantano has so many exciting, raw skills even though he hasn’t come close to putting everything together yet. You can see it there, but it’s just under the surface, needing somebody to unlock it.

Nobody ever gave Tennessee a chance on Saturday. The No. 1 reason is because nobody had any confidence that Butch Jones and his coaching staff could put the Vols in a position to win. This offense is broken, and it cannot be fixed. It can’t be successful in the SEC.

Recruits are dropping. Players are fighting. Other players are leaving. And the losses are piling up. They’re coming in all shapes and sizes, with increasing levels of frustration and futility.

I’m proud to be a Tennessee Vol. I’m proud of my program, proud of my school, proud of the players, proud of the stadium and proud of the traditions. But you know what traditions are? They’re things that happened in the past.

I need to be proud of the product that’s put on the field week in and week out, and I’m not. This is a shadow of what Tennessee football is supposed to be.

Somebody fix it.

Tennessee’s Locks & Keys Week 8: The Bloodbath

 

There’s really nothing that can be said by now that hasn’t already been said, and there’s not much we can do about this weekend, either.

More than likely, unless Tennessee pulls off one of the biggest upsets in school history, the Vols are going to be 3-4 with an embarrassing loss at the hands of the hated Alabama Crimson Tide. UT is a 37-point underdog, which pretty much tells you all you know about what this coaching regime has become.

Now, head coach Butch Jones will try to have his team pull off the improbable and take him from lame-duck status to an up-in-the-air, tenuous situation at best. With the way the fans have responded to UT’s fifth-year coach in the past few weeks, it’s difficult to see any scenario where he is the coach next year. The timing of when that happens is anybody’s guess.

But, for now, Jones is the head coach of our Vols. It would be great if we could all treat him as such and pull for this team this weekend against the top-ranked team in the country. If you’re a fan, you’re a fan through thick and thin. And it hasn’t been this thin in a while, dating back to Jones’ first year and the season-ending, losing year-clinching loss to Vanderbilt.

Last weekend, UT fell to .500 with a 15-9 loss at home to a bad South Carolina team that was missing its top receiver and was running its third-string running back. Yet, Brandon Johnson couldn’t catch a rifled fourth-down pass by Jarrett Guarantano as time expired, and the Vols expired. Again.

A big reason is because only one of my keys was met, and even that is debatable. Let’s look.

  • Put Guarantano in position to be successful: Again, the first two games of offensive coordinator Larry Scott’s tenure was extremely misleading. He’s been bad since. Really bad. In Jarrett Guarantano’s first career start, he had just 133 passing yards and -2 rushing yards. They didn’t roll him out of the pocket enough. They didn’t do quick-hitters enough. They didn’t use the middle of the field enough. A lot of that is UT’s receivers look uncoached. But the whole offense is discombobulated. FAIL.
  • Block out the noise: Tennessee seemed to respond very well to start the game, coming out of the gates playing with passion. The offense has deep-rooted problems unrelated to all the buzz off the field, but they’re a major reason why there’s buzz in the first place. Still, this team looked largely unaffected. SUCCESS!
  • Find some heroes: Johnson had the chance to be one. So did Johnson. So did a defensive line that got to face A.J. Turner as SCAR’s RB instead of Rico Dowdle. Exactly nobody stepped up. FAIL.
  • Play a full game: After an inspired start, the Vols made zero halftime adjustments. Before the final drive, they had -7 total yards. The defense couldn’t stop the cutback on the inside zone. It’s just a poorly coached team all the way around. FAIL
  • Get to Bentley: UT sacked him once. Ho-hum. FAIL

When it came to the locks, we’re back on track. We went 6-2 last week and after that atrocious 1-7 week where we were horrid, we’ve gone 11-5 in the last two weeks. That’s SKRONG, as Jameis Winston would say.

But before we get to this week’s hot picks, let’s look at the keys to beating Alabama.

KEYS

Now, we have to move onto Alabama. God help us all. It’s going to get ugly, and it’s probably going to get there quickly. If you’re a Tennessee fan, pretty much the only thing to root for is for the Vols to beat the spread, and then for what you want to happen — whatever that is — after the game.

Petition the SEC to play 14 players on both sides at once

This is the No. 9 scoring offense and the 15th-ranked overall offense in the country the Vols are facing this week, and Alabama would be even better if it kept its starters in the game longer than three quarters.

The Tide don’t have to.

Defensively, there’s more speed and talent all over the field than any team in the country.

This is going to be bad for the Vols. I really don’t see any way it isn’t. If Tennessee plays its best game and Alabama plays its worst, it’s still a double-digit loss without some game-changing plays. Obviously, you have to play 11-on-11. It’s just hard seeing the Vols have a chance to win if they have to play by the rules, which, unfortunately, they will.

Only Alabama gets away with breaking the rules in Tuscaloosa.

(See what I did there? Man, that’s a good setup…)

Hurts (Not) So Good

Everybody loves to talk about the ways Jalen Hurts struggles. There aren’t a lot of people who talk about just what kind of next-level dimension the sophomore signal-caller brings to an offense that was already very good.

First-year coordinator Brian Daboll has done a good job of putting Hurts in position to make plays, and a lot of times, when plays aren’t there, Hurts creates them with his feet. The Vols have to make him be a dropback passer, spy him and take away the run. Nobody else has been successful doing it, and UT has been anything but disciplined in its run lanes this year. But the Vols have to find something in this game.

Or Hurts will crush them. He did last year as a true freshman.

Four Turnovers

Tennessee is next-to-last in the league in turnover differential and tied for ninth in takeaways. That’s terrible. The Vols need to somehow turn into an opportunistic unit and get FOUR turnovers to have a chance to win this game.

Yes, that’s a tall order. It’s going to take some tall orders for the Vols to win this game. They’ve got to do some crazy things. Whatever it takes. They have to create extra possessions and take advantage of those possessions. They also have to play a clean, mistake-free game themselves. Then, maybe it can happen.

Maybe.

Berry Merry Return Game

He hasn’t played since the season opener, but Tennessee dynamic returner Evan Berry may play against the Crimson Tide. That’s a huge X-factor for the Vols.

It doesn’t matter who they play, Berry is capable of taking kicks to the house. Given how horrible the Vols offense has been, Tennessee needs to generate points in other ways. Berry taking one back for six would be a great manufactured touchdown. If there’s any way possible he can play, Butch Jones needs to get Berry on the field.

He’s a difference-maker in a game where the Vols simply don’t have many.

Game of their Life

Hey, stranger things have happened, right?

I mean, not much stranger. But there have been some strange things happen.

The team we’ve watched this year in orange were fortunate to beat UMass. They’re 3-4, and they’re about to fire their coach. That team may lose 70-0 to Alabama.

But this UT team is better than the UT team we’ve seen. There comes a point in time when it becomes more than a game. It’s about pride. Whether the Vols play for Jones, play for each other or play to prove everybody wrong, it’s time they played for something. They’ve got to play the best game imaginable to beat Alabama in this game.

Go make a memory.

LOCKS

Hey! Break up the me’s! I’m awesome! 11-5 in the past two weeks, and all of a sudden, I’m 26-23-1 on the year. That’s pretty good. We’ve rallied after that 1-7 week, and now, we’re back on track.

For the most part, we were really seeing things well last week. The bad loss was picking UCLA to beat Arizona, and the Bruins lost 47-30. So, yeah, that sucked. But the other loss was Michigan State, who were 4.5 favorites over Minnesota and won 30-27. The Spartans were dominating that game and allowed 17 unanswered points to close the game. Man, that one should have been a win.

Other than that — SKRONG. West Virginia covered against Texas Tech, North Carolina State handled Pitt to cover 11.5, TCU hammered Kansas State on the road, Navy and Memphis were waaaaaaay under 75.5, and we got lucky in the UCLA under as that covered by a half a point in a barn burner. There you have it. 6-2.

We’re winning money. You know, if it were legal and all. At the very least, we’re helping you make your picks in your fantasy college football leagues. Let’s keep it up, shall we?

  1. Purdue -9 over Rutgers. All Purdue does is win money. It’s like Vegas still doesn’t respect Jeff Brohm and the Boilermakers. I sure do, and I’m riding them to the bank every week. They covered easily against Wisconsin last week in a loss, and they will this week in a win.
  2. Syracuse +17 over Miami. I don’t get this at all. The Orange aren’t bad. They aren’t as good as they were when they upset Clemson last Friday night. But the Hurricanes are the worst undefeated team out there. Dino Babers will have his team ready. It will lose, but it’ll be close.
  3. UCF -7.5 over Navy. This is my favorite BY FAR of the week. Navy couldn’t stop Memphis last weekend, and UCF’s offense is a lot better than the Tigers. UCF’s defense is better, too. This will be a double-digit win.
  4. SMU -8.5 over Cincinnati. Luke Fickell is going to turn around the Bearcats, but it isn’t this year. Chad Morris is doing a good job in Dallas, and the Mustangs score too many points for the Bearcats to hang. It won’t be as bad as the UCF game, but SMU will win by double digits.
  5. South Florida -12.5 over Tulane. The Green Wave is having a nice return-to-respectability season. But Charlie Strong has the Bulls playing well. Tulane won’t have an answer for Quinton Flowers and Co.
  6. West Virginia -9 over Baylor. Much like Purdue, all the Mountaineers do is win money. Now, they’re playing winless Baylor and not even getting 10 points. I don’t get it.
  7. Georgia Tech -5.5 over Wake Forest. Wake isn’t offensively inept like it has been in the past, but I’m not sure the Demon Deacons will have an answer for the option. This GT team should have beaten Miami. It will take out its frustrations against the Deacs.
  8. Oklahoma -12.5 over Kansas State. The Wildcats get too much respect for a mediocre team. The Sooners are much better, and they’ll win by more than two touchdowns on the road. Book it.

Lyn-J Dixon Decommits: The Bad News Keeps Coming

 

Back when life was good and the Vols hadn’t lost yet, this year’s recruiting class looked like it could be one to remember for head coach Butch Jones.

On Saturday, it continued to crumble with the season and Jones’ coaching regime.

Georgia high school running back Lyn-J Dixon decommitted from Tennessee’s once-vaunted recruiting class on Saturday, hours after the Vols lost 15-9 to South Carolina.

He joins Brendon Harris and Jatavious Harris. They likely won’t be the last ones to go, either. Perhaps he didn’t want to play in an offense that couldn’t generate a touchdown in 10 quarters.

But he’ll likely get to be re-recruited by another coach soon, anyway. It’s getting rough on Rocky Top.

Other commitments are taking visits left and right, voicing displeasure on Twitter and heading in different directions.

With Jones’ future up in the air, it’s safe to say this Tennessee recruiting class is going to look a whole lot different come National Signing Day. It may look a lot worse before it improves some.

Dixon is a dynamic playmaker who looked like he could be another Alvin Kamara type. He’s being heavily recruited by Clemson and others, and he’ll likely head in another direction though his tweet didn’t rule out the Vols.

This is one of the reasons why athletic director John Currie needs to act quickly. This is a program right now that is in limbo, with negativity happening everywhere from the locker room to the sideline to recruiting to the scoreboard. That kind of up-in-the-air status is one that is difficult for anybody deciding where to play his next four or five years.

Dixon is going to be a great player for somebody. Unless the Vols do something different and get in on him, it won’t be in Knoxville.