Worth watching 7.18.18: Barnes’ birthday, weight-room hype

Barnes banter!


There may actually be some vomiting involved, but I don’t think that that’s what they mean:


Best of SEC Media Days yesterday:

Some interesting stuff about rules changes. How about fewer commercials?

Worth reading 7.18.18: Is Pruitt criticism “blistering” or fair?

If you read only one thing about the Vols today . . .

. . . make it this, from 247Sports:

The headlines for this bit of news are amusing. That one up there is fair, but when you click through, it’s “blasts.” The News Sentinel yesterday called it “blistering.” That’s likely for the purpose of priming the clicks pump a bit, so it’s understandable, but really, all Murray said was that he didn’t know if Pruitt was going to be able to handle all of the extra stuff a head coach needs to handle. That’s fair, because really, nobody knows the answer to that question.

The thing that troubles me about this is that Murray’s passing reference to his opinion that Pruitt was disrespectful to Mark Richt when he worked for him was accepted without any additional probing as to the details and now is passed around as an assumed fact. So what if Pruitt is disrespectful, they’re saying. Maybe that’s good, they’re saying. What I want to know are the details about the supposed disrespect so I can decide if that’s what it truly was. Until then, I’m giving him the benefit of the doubt and concluding that it was probably just his standard bluntness.

Other Vols stuff worth reading today

  1. All the stuff that’s actually in your football team’s playbook, via SB Nation. Not Vols, but college football. Bookmark this and come back. It’s full of great stuff.
  2. Joe Moorhead explains the 5 tenets of the SEC West’s most dangerous offense, via SB NationDitto the above.
  3. The Next-Step List: Ryan Johnson and Theo Jackson, via Gameday on Rocky Top
  4. Beef back? Tennessee’s latest weights gains under new S&C staff, via VolQuest
  5. SEC burning questions heading into the 2018 football season, via KnoxNews
  6. Tony Barnhart: ‘Tennessee has a good situation’ with Pruitt and Fulmer, via Vols Wire
  7. Florida DL Cece Jefferson: Tennessee defenders are ‘blessed’ to be coached by Chris Rumph, via Saturday Down South
  8. Dodge ball: 5 tough questions Jeremy Pruitt might get but won’t answer at SEC Media Days, via Saturday Down South
  9. Tennessee Vols football’s 2018 opponents at a glance: Vanderbilt Commodores, via 247Sports
  10. Greg McElroy believes Florida will beat Tennessee “convincingly” in 2018, via 247Sports
  11. Tennessee Vols Football: Kentucky coach Mark Stoops says ‘you just can’t’ prepare for being a first-year head coach, via 247Sports

Behind the paywalls

  • Scouting the Opponent: Charlotte, via VolQuest
  • Tennessee Vols football recruiting: Four-star safety Jaylen McCollough planning more visits, via 247Sports

10 Questions for 2018: Vols vs The Non-UGA SEC East

Tennessee takes the stage in Atlanta today, and the media will unveil their picks for the 2018 SEC standings before the week is out. Georgia should be the overwhelming favorite in the SEC East coming off a near-miss in the national championship game and the number one recruiting class of 2018. How the rest of the division shakes out will be of interest to Tennessee, and not just this season.

This is an era Tennessee fans of my age (36) and younger are unaccustomed to. Georgia hasn’t won the SEC in consecutive years since the Herschel Walker days in the early 1980’s. The Dawgs have two sets of back-to-back division titles (2002-03 and 2011-12), but both times the second year came via a tiebreaker. Tennessee fans who grew up familiar with Georgia playing third fiddle have never seen a Bulldog program consistently on top the way they’ll have a chance to be in 2017, 2018, and beyond.

And the gap between one and two is substantial. Their traditional contemporaries at Florida and Tennessee changed coaches. Missouri seems due for an up year on the field, but is yet to level up in recruiting. Kentucky and Vanderbilt have yet to shed their reputations under their current administrations. Will South Carolina be the #2 pick in this year’s SEC East?

That idea may also seem foreign to those of us holding on tightly to Tennessee’s glory days in the 1990’s. But the truth is it’s not just South Carolina, but the vast majority of the SEC that’s been better than Tennessee the last ten years:

SEC Overall Records 2008-2017

Team Wins Losses Pct.
Alabama 125 14 .899
LSU 95 34 .736
Georgia 95 39 .709
Florida 86 43 .667
Auburn 83 48 .634
South Carolina 81 49 .623
Missouri 80 50 .615
Texas A&M 77 52 .597
Mississippi State 74 54 .578
Ole Miss 69 57 .548
Arkansas 67 59 .523
Tennessee 62 63 .496
Kentucky 53 72 .424
Vanderbilt 53 72 .424

(data from the always-helpful stassen.com)

This is the Tennessee recruits know: not Kentucky and Vanderbilt, but not on par with the rest of the league either.

And this is where Jeremy Pruitt’s first comparison must fall: not to Georgia, and certainly not to Alabama. But what are his Vols doing against the rest of the SEC East?

#5: The Vols vs The Non-UGA SEC East

At the old site we did an annual off-season piece ranking the importance of each game for the upcoming season. It was equal parts fun and futility, because it’s impossible to know how good or bad Derek Dooley’s offense will actually be when Missouri comes rolling into Knoxville on November 17. But in general, I think we can say this for 2018: the five most important games will be the ones against the non-Georgia SEC East.

West Virginia will be the first impression and would be fun to steal, but Pruitt’s first real measuring stick will be how this rebuild is going compared to the one in Gainesville, how quickly it can catch what’s happening in both Columbias, and how well it can avoid another loss to Kentucky or Vanderbilt.

A little more than a month ago we looked at Pruitt’s relative recruiting success compared to the non-UGA East in blue-chip ratio. Tennessee’s has fallen, for the moment, below the 50% threshold needed to be in the national championship hunt. But the Vols are still out-performing the rest of the non-UGA division. Six of Tennessee’s 14 commitments for 2019 are four-or-five-stars, 42.3%. South Carolina sits at 6-of-16 (37.5%), Florida at 4-of-11 (36.3%), while Kentucky, Missouri, and Vanderbilt are yet to nab a four-or-five-star.

That’s good news for climbing the ladder in the future. In the present?

Here’s how the non-UGA SEC East projects in ESPN’s FPI, Bill Connelly’s S&P+, and Phil Steele’s Power Poll:

Team FPI S&P+ Steele
Florida 21 32 23
Missouri 29 30 28
South Carolina 28 35 24
Tennessee 54 79 70
Kentucky 60 64 75
Vanderbilt 76 75 85

As you can see, the preseason expectation for Tennessee is basically what the last ten years have been: better than Kentucky and Vanderbilt, but in a lower tier than Missouri, South Carolina, and Florida’s restart.

We’ve got this as only the fifth most important question for Pruitt’s first year. But it will rise quickly as time goes on. Derek Dooley had the Vols competitive for four quarters with the entire division in 2012 until he was a dead man walking, but couldn’t take advantage. Butch Jones should have won the SEC East in 2015 and 2016, but too many close games led to too many close losses before the bottom fell out. Now Georgia is the biggest threat within the division since Urban Meyer and Tim Tebow a decade ago.

The early returns in recruiting suggest Pruitt will bring in the necessary talent to get the Vols back in the conversation. How much progress will we see on the field in those five games this fall?

 

10 Questions for 2018

10. Which backups on the defensive line will be starters in 2019?

09. Can special teams make the difference in a coach’s first year?

08. What do we know about Tyson Helton’s offense from his time at USC?

07. Who’s the third/fourth wide receiver in an offense that will actually throw them the ball?

06. What about team chemistry with a first-time coach and a hodgepodge of players?

 

The Next-Step List: Ryan Johnson and Theo Jackson

 

Football is near.

And it won’t be long until we’re gearing ourselves up for the Vols to usher in the Jeremy Pruitt era.

We all know 2018 likely isn’t going to be a pretty sight, but that doesn’t mean we can’t talk ourselves into the Vols being much-improved under the former Alabama defensive coordinator. After all, Butch Jones is gone.

You just can’t help this time of year to be a tiny bit optimistic, even if logic (and recent history) suggests this is going to be yet another rebuilding campaign in Knoxville. Pruitt wants to win now, and he definitely isn’t used to losing after successful tenures in Tuscaloosa, Tallahassee and Athens, Georgia.

He’s outfitted UT’s roster with more size, and an infusion of collegiate talent. And he’s won some recruiting battles for guys who must be able to come right in and make an impact.

But what about the dudes already on the team? Who needs to make a major step forward in 2018 for the Vols to rise above the 4-8 doldrums of a historically horrible season where it looked like the team quit on former coach Butch Jones and his staff?

Let’s take a look at our latest installment.

OFFENSE

No. 4 Ryan Johnson, RS Sophomore Guard/Center

There are a ton of offensive line candidates who must step up and help star Trey Smith fortify the front, and even Smith has plenty of question marks next to his name after an undisclosed illness/injury kept him out of spring practice and there’s still a bit of uncertainty fogging his 2018 season.

A couple of players on the O-line made this list, and the first one we come to is Ryan Johnson, a former 4-star instate product from Brentwood Academy who enjoyed a solid spring and catapulted to the front of the race for the starting center gig ahead of Riley Locklear. Though Locklear may start at guard, he’s going to have plenty of competition from true freshman Jerome Carvin, and Johnson is expected to have his share of competition from Locklear as well. He’ll probablly rep at both spots. Brandon Kennedy stepping in as an Alabama transfer makes it an even healthier battle inside, and Johnson may find himself at guard.

Either way, he could settle firmly in the rotation.

He is extremely strong, possesses good size and is entering his third year of the program. It helps that Will Friend is a renowned offensive line coach who should get the most out of Johnson, especially after he’s played for unproven [Walt Wells] or flat-out bad [Don Mahoney] coaches his past two years.

At 6’6″, 305 pounds, Johnson is big enough to be a tackle, but he has never really fit at the position. After moving to the interior of the line, Johnson has proved his versatility and practiced at left guard this spring, too. So, it’s not a guarantee that he’ll play center.

To borrow a line from former coach/clown Derek Dooley, the offensive line looks like a “sack of potatoes” beyond Smith right now. Again, you could have inserted several guys like Marcus Tatum, Riley Locklear or Drew Richmond in this spot. But if Johnson can lock down the center of the line or a guard spot and not just be a leader but be a quality player, the Vols are going to surprise a lot of people on that offensive front.

 

DEFENSE 

No. 4 Theo Jackson, Sophomore Safety

There’s no question that Nigel Warrior is going to start at one safety spot, but the Vols have a lit-up vacancy sign opposite him. After a good spring, rising senior Micah Abernathy probably holds the edge, and another senior who has played a lot of football — Todd Kelly Jr. — will have a say in that race, too.

But Tennessee desperately needs Theo Jackson to emerge and take over that other spot on the back side.

“Needs to,” you say? Yes. He does. “Why?” you ask.

The answer is simple: He’s a big, long athlete who has blazing speed and quality ball skills. He put on 15 pounds this offseason to creep up over 190 pounds, which is huge news because he has such a wiry frame. If the scheme can click for him, Jackson could turn a major concern for the Vols into a strength.

At 6’2″ and now over 190 pounds, Jackson could be primed for a breakout sophomore year. Is he always in the proper position? Nope. But he’s still a baby, and maybe somebody can actually teach him how to play this year, right? There’s a reason why Bob Shoop and his staff loved the Overton High School product, and there’s a reason why Jeremy Pruitt, Kevin Sherrer and Co. love him. The upside is astounding.

It would be best-case scenario for the Vols if Shawn Shamburger can rise up and seize the Star position and Jackson emerges at safety. If that happens, you could have a secondary of Warrior-Jackson-Shamburger and a cornerback battle between Alontae Taylor, Bryce Thompson, Baylen Buchanan, Maleik Gray, Marquill Osborne and Kenneth George Jr. That’s a super-inexperienced group, but there would be a ton of talent and speed in that group.

And, let’s face it: The Vols badly need talent and speed on the back end of the defense. Those two things can make up for a lot of mistakes.

It’s encouraging that Jackson had a great offseason in the weight room and added some good weight. Now, he just needs to make big strides where it counts.

Here’s the first installment [Jauan Jennings and Jonathan Kongbo].

Worth reading 7.17.18: Vols who need to take the next step, Part I

If you read only one thing about the Vols today . . .

. . . make it this, from Brad Shepard:

Other Vols stuff worth reading today

  1. Tennessee Recruiting: Future of the Nose Tackle Position Takes Shape With Simmons Pledge, via Gameday on Rocky Top
  2. Warrior Named to Bednarik Award Watch List – University of Tennessee, via UTSports
  3. Ten questions Vols’ Jeremy Pruitt will get at SEC Media Days, via 247Sports. Expect the answers to these questions to be the news of the day tomorrow and Thursday.
  4. Tennessee Vols football recruiting: Jeremy Pruitt focused on evaluations in recruiting, via 247Sports
  5. 2018 SEC Media Days: Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher Tennessee Vols coach Jeremy Pruitt ‘could have been a head coach a long time ago’, via 247Sports
  6. Vols’ Ryan Thaxton suspended following off-field incident, via 247Sports
  7. Tennessee Takes Center Stage for SEC Network Takeover July 26 – University of Tennessee, via UTSports. This post has the entire schedule.
  8. SEC preseason power rankings: Bama, Georgia still 1-2, via ESPN. Tennessee is No. 12.
  9. SEC Football Kickoff Media Days Central, via SEC Sports. If you’re looking for links to videos and transcripts, this is it.

Behind the paywalls

  • Beyond the Asparagus: Jeremy Pruitt’s days as an MTV…, via The Athletic
  • Tennessee Vols football recruiting: Coach sees ‘so much potential’ in DT Elijah Simmons, via 247Sports
  • Tennessee Vols football: Five takeaways from updated 2018 roster, via 247Sports

The Next-Step List: Jauan Jennings and Jonathan Kongbo

The other night, I drove past my old high school and saw the lights on at the “Pit” at Lincoln County High School. I went up to the gate, rolled the window down and smelled the wet grass on the field. It got me all gridiron-giddy.

Football is near.

And it won’t be long until we’re gearing ourselves up for the Vols to usher in the Jeremy Pruitt era.

We all know 2018 isn’t going to be a pretty sight, but that doesn’t mean we can’t talk ourselves into the Vols being much-improved under the former Alabama defensive coordinator. After all, Butch Jones is gone.

You just can’t help this time of year to be a tiny bit optimistic, even if logic (and recent history) suggests this is going to be yet another rebuilding campaign in Knoxville. Pruitt wants to win now, and he definitely isn’t used to losing after successful tenures in Tuscaloosa, Tallahassee and Athens, Georgia.

He’s outfitted UT’s roster with more size, an injection of collegiate players like Stanford quarterback Keller Chryst, Michigan State running back Madre London, JUCO defensive tackle Emmit Gooden, JUCO cornerback Kenneth George Jr., JUCO tight end Dominick Wood-Anderson, JUCO offensive tackle Jahmir Johnson, and JUCO outside linebacker Jordan Allen who need to be able to help UT right away.

And he’s won some recruiting battles for guys who must be able to come right in and make an impact.

But what about the dudes already on the team? Who needs to make a major step forward in 2018 for the Vols to rise above the 4-8 doldrums of a historically horrible season where it looked like the team quit on former coach Butch Jones and his staff?

Over the course of the next five days, we’ll look at five offensive players and five defensive players who have to emerge and go beyond what they’ve already been. For some, it’s rising above good player status and becoming reliable stars. For others, it’s about reaching the potential that Jones failed to squeeze from them.

As always, you’re encouraged to make your own additions in the comments section.

OFFENSE

No. 5 Jauan Jennings, Junior Wide Receiver

There aren’t a lot of alpha-dog difference-makers on Tennessee’s roster. After all, recruiting too many of those guys would have meant challenging Jones’ ego, and we all know that wasn’t something the former UT head honcho liked. So, too often, there were a lot of nice guys on the field who didn’t get the job done when it came crunch time.

That’s easy to look back on now, but none of us wanted to believe it as it was happening.

Jennings is a bad mamma jamma, and we all know this. Unfortunately for UT fans everywhere, he also has a history of being a bit of a turd, to put things mildly.

If you can look beyond those shortcomings, though, Jennings is a playmaker with the potential to be one of the biggest stars in the SEC. Two years ago, he had 40 catches for 580 yards and seven touchdowns for the Vols, including a soul-stealing catch-and-run score against Florida’s Jalen Tabor in a massive comeback win and the Hail Mary grab in the Dobb-nail boot win over Georgia.

Those are arguably the two most memorable plays in the past decade of Vol football.

Tennessee needs Jennings, and — let’s be honest here — Jennings needs the Vols, too. He is good enough to play in the NFL, and though that league is full of guys who’ve done much worse than Jennings, he needs to prove that he can take a second chance and run with it.

That’s exactly what’s happened so far as, after interim coach Brady Hoke, kicked him off the team, Jennings met with Jeremy Pruitt and athletic director Phillip Fulmer, who gave him a short leash and let him work his way back into the fold. He’s done nothing since that time but be an exemplary player and a leading presence.

He’s without a doubt going to have some rust after getting hurt in the season opener last year against Georgia Tech, missing the rest of the year and this past spring, but if he’s in football shape, he can plug in and be a No. 1 receiver.

Actually, he may be one of the seven best receivers in the SEC. He’s that good.

The Vols need him. Jarrett Guarantano (or Keller Chryst) needs him. And Jennings has the potential of catching an even bigger career Hail Mary and finishing a promising UT career with a flourish. If he does, it would be a storybook ending and it could help the Vols make a major leap forward in what many think will be a throw-away season.

DEFENSE

No. 5 Jonathan Kongbo, Senior Outside Linebacker

If you were to look up “Typical Butch Jones recruit” in the figurative dictionary of disgruntled Tennessee fans, Kongbo’s picture would be right there beside the definition alongside Kahlil McKenzie, Drew Richmond, Kyle Phillips, and…and…and…

Yeah, you get the picture. It’s a long list.

Which is exactly the reason why Kongbo belongs on this list. Because, mainly, Kongbo still needs to prove he belongs.

He needs to prove that he belongs up there with the 5-star status that stood on his recruiting profile out of junior college. He needs to prove he’s a havoc-wreaking force who can make a difference on UT’s defense. Simply put: he needs to prove he belongs in an SEC starting lineup.

Those may be harsh words, but they’re true words.

Much like Jennings has to prove his maturity off the field, Kongbo needs to show growth on it. We’re not real sure what he can do.

After two largely ho-hum years, Kongbo enters his final season on Rocky Top moving a level back from defensive end to outside linebacker. It’s a spot that is also occupied by another former defensive end in Darrell Taylor. There are also players such as Allen, Austin Smith, and others who’ll battle for snaps at one of the spots. Nothing is going to be given to Kongbo, but there are also reasons to hope.

He’s an athletic physical specimen who fits perfectly in a 3-4 scheme. He’s playing for a coach now in Chris Rumph who has a rich history of developing players. And Kongbo is a natural pass-rusher, who can do just that this year. Rather than always having to be in position and getting taken off the field because he’s struggling to run-fit, Kongbo can just pin his ears back and get after quarterbacks.

If he is a one-trick pony this year for the Vols, that’ll be just fine, as long as that one trick is a good one. Give us sacks, young Kongbo. If you do that — say, give UT seven or eight sacks this year — that will completely transform this defense.

In my opinion, the biggest weakness on this entire team is the inability to get after the opposing quarterback. The second-biggest weakness is lack of proven, quality cornerbacks. When you combine the two — and throw in the inability to consistently stop anybody running up the middle — you have an atrocious, historically awful defense. The Vols are trying to emerge from the forgettable Bob Shoop era and return to respectability on that side of the ball.

In order to do that, quarterbacks need to fear somebody (anybody) coming off the edge.

If you have faith that somebody will be Kongbo, you have a whole lot more faith than you should. He’s shown us very little so far. But, how much of that was the Jones-Shoop fiasco, and how much of it is Kongbo maybe just not being an SEC player?

We all hope it’s the former and not the latter.

If Pruitt, Kevin Sherrer and Rumph can turn him into the kind of player that made everybody in the country want him out of JUCO, the Vols are going to have a very impressive player already on the roster.

Tennessee Recruiting: Future of the Nose Tackle Position Takes Shape With Simmons Pledge

We may not want to be too patient throughout the 2018 football season, but help is on the way for the Tennessee Volunteers as new coach Jeremy Pruitt continues to outfit the present and future roster with size and physicality to compete in the SEC.

On the same day the news emerged that incoming freshman Kingston Harris is listed on the SEC Media Days roster at 6’3″, 316 pounds and looks primed to compete for snaps at nose tackle in the future if not right away, UT received a massive commitment for the 2019 class.

And we mean “massive” in the most literal sense.

Nashville defensive tackle Elijah Simmons committed to Tennessee over Missouri, Vanderbilt, Memphis and others. The 3-star defensive tackle may not have a ton of marquee offers, but he’s a big, physical specimen who looks tailor-made to plant in the middle of a 3-4 defensive front.

He is 6’1″, 344 pounds and is a low center of gravity who packs a mean punch at the line of scrimmage. He’s a space-eating force who can dunk a basketball at his size, and the Pearl-Cohn High School product gives UT the kind of huge, athletic presence that it doesn’t currently have.

Plus, it’s always nice when a kid looks like he wants to destroy you and then eat your face like Hannibal Lecter.

**Shudders; trickle of pee**

LOOK AWAY!

He probably will need to shed some “bad” weight, but there’s no reason why Simmons can’t play at 330 pounds and clog up running lanes in the near future. That’s exactly what UT needs for him to do to become a much-needed puzzle piece to the future.

So much of what’s yet to come from Simmons is still untapped.

“He still don’t even really know the position yet,” Pearl-Cohn head coach Tony Brunetti told GoVols247’s Ryan Callahan. “He’s still learning it. But he’s got major potential.”

Though it’s asking a ton of Simmons to be a future star when he hasn’t even played his senior year of high school yet, there are a couple of factors that are at least worth mentioning: Pearl-Cohn is the same high school that produced another pretty good UT defensive tackle in former Outland Trophy winner and long-time NFL defensive stalwart John Henderson.

Also, Simmons will be coached by another former Outland Trophy winner in Tracy Rocker.

Now, before you think we’re already putting him on early watch lists, nose tackles never win the award. But he’s going to be playing for a defensive staff that has a rich history of getting the most out of their players, and if he develops right, he could help the Vols fill a void that has plagued them for years. When’s the last time you remember UT having a quality rush defense?

I’m waiting.

Still waiting…

Thought so. Me neither.

It’s going to be interesting to see how (and if) Simmons and 3-star defensive tackle commit LeDarrius Cox fit into the same class. Cox has made no secrets that he isn’t 100 percent locked in with the Vols, and as Auburn and others come after him, he may not stick. If he does, UT will probably happily take two big dudes at the position in the 2019 class.

But it’s encouraging that a few productive months in the weight room has helped Harris, the IMG Academy under-the-radar prospect to look the way he does, and the Vols are encouraged by his early returns. Also, JUCO transfer Emmit Gooden will play the position this year along with seniors Shy Tuttle and Alexis Johnson.

Tennessee needs quality production out of that position this year and in the future, and Simmons is a player who UT worked out, he camped well, and the Vols loves what he brings to the table. He’s a very important piece of the ’19 haul.

The Vols want size, and Simmons certainly has that.

The Vols are still 18th nationally in recruiting and ninth in the SEC, but there are several other major targets expected to commit fairly soon. Though UT missed out on instate prospect Zion Logue who pledged to Georgia this past week, Simmons is a quality cog on the defensive line. There are some defensive backs who could “pop” soon, too. Jaydon Hill, Warren Burrell, Jaylen McCollough and Devin Bush are a few defensive backs with possible summer pledge dates. All of those guys have UT high on their list.

So, buckle up. It could be a strong month for the Vols, who should wind up in the top 12 or so in recruiting in this class, and that could surge with a strong showing on the field.

Worth watching 7.16.18: Football hype videos begin

HYPE VIDEO!


Lots of great discussion about Tennessee here with an SEC Network panel that includes VFL Jason Witten:

John Pennington’s weekly TV show The Sports Source is always good. Here’s this week’s first segment:

Yves Pons has a thing about dunking on kids:


This is here because Trey Smith’s name is on the board:

The guy who’s responsible for this says it was a mistake to post it. That was the second mistake, the first being creating it in the first place (UPDATE: Aww, it was so bad, he finally removed it. Too bad.)

Worth reading 7.16.18: Finally, the details about Jalen Hurd

If you read only one thing about the Vols today . . .

. . . make it this, from Bleacher Report’s Matt Hayes:

Other Vols stuff worth reading today

  1. Aspire to Inspire, via Beyond the Legacy, A great in-depth interview with VFL Dale Ellis.
  2. Faith bringing former Vols QB Josh Dobbs to Chattanooga, via the Times Free Press
  3. Tennessee Vols Football: Jason Witten says he likes ‘what Jeremy Pruitt is doing’, via 247Sports
  4. Kendal Vickers has the talent, attitude to become sixth Vol-Steeler in ‘VFL’, via 247Sports
  5. IMG coach Kevin Wright says Tennessee Vols freshman Kingston Harris will compete for playing time ‘right away’, via 247Sports
  6. Barton Simmons says Vols recruiting players who ‘fit’, via 247Sports
  7. Barton Simmons says ‘there’s still talent there’ on Vols’ roster, via 247Sports
  8. Tennessee Vols football’s 2018 opponents at a glance: Missouri Tigers, via 247Sports
  9. Tennessee Vols football: Jersey numbers, heights and weights for newcomers and freshmen, via 247Sports
  10. Teams take center stage for SEC Network Takeover, via SEC Sports. Tennessee is scheduled for Thursday, July 26.
  11. SEC Football Kickoff Media Days Central, via SEC Sports
  12. Tennessee football: Who will Vols miss the most in 2018?, via Saturday Down South

Behind the paywalls

  • The Influencer: Jeremy Pruitt brings Rainsville to Tennessee…, via The Athletic. This would be in the Must Read section if it wasn’t behind a paywall.
  • Scouting the Opponent: South Carolina, via VolQuest
  • Scouting the Opponent: Auburn, via VolQuest
  • Scouting the Opponent: Alabama, via VolQuest
  • Scouting the Opponent: Alabama, via VolQuest