Report: Darrin Kirkland likely to stay at Tennessee

Um, that report that Tennessee linebacker Darrin Kirkland Jr. would be leaving Rocky Top for another school as a graduate transfer? Never mind (maybe):


As I said, maybe. We’ll see. Who knows?

If true, it’s great news. It’s odd, though. The report that Kirkland was leaving came straight from his own Twitter account. That account has since been deleted. So, all we have is a tweet from the guy himself from an account that has now been nuked, and a subsequent tweet from a guy based on an unnamed source that the guy has changed his mind.

Intrigue!

As I said in our post earlier this week, we’d mentioned in our Vols preseason magazine just how important Kirkland’s healthy return could be to the team, and I still believe that. If he has reconsidered after meeting with both his family and Pruitt, then that’s a good thing for the team.

 

Vols stuff worth reading today

If you read only one thing about the Vols today, make it this:

Remembering Bill Nowling, Willis Tucker, Rudy Klarer and Ig Fuson: Four Tennessee Legends You Need to Know | Gameday on Rocky Top

And here’s some other good stuff to know today:

VolQuest.com – Madre London ready to seize opportunity, be a veteran voice for Vols

Rivals.com – Quavaris Crouch, the No. 1 player in the country, updates his recruitment

Spring meetings this week

Coach Fulmer: “The coaches, sometimes, it’s like sitting with the Russians – or at least it used to be. Nobody wanted to agree on anything,” said Fulmer, UT’s first-year AD and former football coach. “In the athletic directors’ meetings, everybody has their reasons for doing things or voting how they vote, and everybody’s protective, but there’s also some feeling of cooperation for the conference sake. I’ve enjoyed that.”

Update on when top-50 LB JJ Peterson is expected to join the Tennessee Vols ($$$)

Tennessee football coach Jeremy Pruitt stays true to word, opens 4-quarterback derby

Pruitt: “We’ll have four guys, we practice four groups, and those guys all get the same amount of reps and we’ll see how they develop over the summer and into fall camp,” Pruitt said Thursday in Kingsport, Tenn., at the final Big Orange Caravan stop of the 2018 tour.

“As we get closer to the times we scrimmage — we’ll scrimmage on the ninth [fall period] practice — we’ll chart things from Day 1 until that scrimmage and that will give us an idea about how they are going to scrimmage.”

Tennessee Vols football: OL signee Tanner Antonutti ready ‘to compete’ after dealing with illness

Junior college CB Kenneth George Jr. watched Alabama games to prep for Jeremy Pruitt’s defense

 


Not sure how much credence to give this, to be honest, so grain of salt and all that.


“Not against it” also means “not a priority,” you know.

Remembering Bill Nowling, Willis Tucker, Rudy Klarer and Ig Fuson: Four Tennessee Legends You Need to Know

It’s easy to remember Peyton Manning, Reggie White, Doug Atkins and Johnny Majors for their on-the-field achievements, and they all have legitimate reasons for having their names and jersey numbers enshrined, retired and hanging on the facades of Neyland Stadium for the rest of time.

But you may not know that much about Bill Nowling, Rudy Klarer, Willis Tucker and Clyde “Ig” Fuson, whose Nos. 32, 49, 61 and 62 hang alongside those of the other four. It’s their contributions off the field that led to former athletic director Mike Hamilton’s decision to retire their numbers for good in 2006.

It was one of the few good things Hamilton did as UT AD.

Because, while Manning, White, Atkins and Majors may have been Tennessee legends, Nowling, Klarer, Tucker and Fuson are national legends. They paid the ultimate sacrifice, dying for our country in battle so that we can remain free.

This Memorial Day, while we are all enjoying our lake trips and weenie roasts, we need to remember what the holiday is actually for. And, it would be good for you as a Tennessee fan to remember a little about the four former Vols who left this world ensuring we can have the same rights we enjoy today in ours.

Hopefully one day when your child is sitting beside you in Neyland Stadium — hopefully watching a worthwhile football team again — and he or she looks up and asks you about these men, you’ll be able to tell them a bit about them.

 

Back in 2009 on our old Rocky Top Talk site, I wrote essentially this same article in our “100 Days of Vols” series. I’m writing it again. It will never be enough to say thank you. Then, I wrote:

Bill Nowling, Rudy Klarer, Willis Tucker and Clyde Fuson are names that don’t immediately come to mind when you think of the Tennessee greats. A few years ago when we counted down the top 100 Vols of all-time on my old blog, 3rd Saturday in Blogtober, none of those guys made the list. But they’re the biggest heroes to ever wear the orange and white.

Nowling (No. 32), Klarer (No. 49), Tucker (No. 61) and Fuson (No. 62) gave the ultimate sacrifice for our freedom in World War II. They died so we could be free and so we could stand out there today, eat hot dogs, have cold beverages, shoot fireworks and practice our beliefs — whatever they may be. They died for more than a petty football game. It’s easy in the South for football to be “life” and “death.” We talk about plays killing us and about the field of battle and use all these sports cliches to describe what we see on those yard lines.

But a lot of us have no idea what true battle, true war, is. The ones of us who do know that a football game is just a football game.War is war. Life is life. And when you put that precious life on the line for a bunch of strangers, and you lose that life, that’s the most selfless act imaginable. Nowling, Klarer, Tucker and Fuson did that. For you. For me.

UTSports.com provided a little information on them all when they were honored back in ’06.

Nowling played from 1940-42 for General Robert Neyland (whose rich war history you should read about, as well). According to the article, Nowling was a three-year starter at the all-important position of fullback. In ’40, the Vols were the national champions, and Nowling was a big part of that. Those were some of the best teams in school history. Just how good?

The Vols lost just four games during Nowling’s three seasons.Nowling was a St. Petersburg, Florida, native who died August 9, 1944, while serving in World War II at the age of 23.

Klarer was a teammate of Nowling who played in 1941-42. He started in his final year for the Vols after serving as a backup his first season.

The native of Louisville, Kentucky, was a key member of the 1943 Sugar Bowl champions, but he left the team immediately after the win over Tulsa for Officer’s Training in the Army at Fort Benning, Georgia, according to the UTSports.com article. “Klarer was a 2nd Lieutenant and platoon leader in Germany during World War II. He was killed in action on Feb. 6, 1945, and Klarer received the Silver Star citation posthumously,” the article states.

Tucker was a hometown boy, a Knoxville High School graduate who played two years on the offensive line for a pair of dominant UT squads in 1939 and ’40.

He was a backup at center and guard on the undefeated ’39 team, and then Tucker earned a letter on the national championship team the next year while also standing out as a sprinter for the track team. Tucker, who was named the top track athlete in Tennessee from 1900-50, lost just two games during his career at Rocky Top, and never lost a regular season game, according to the UTSports.com article.

Tucker was killed in action in Germany just prior to the Battle of the Bulge on Nov. 28, 1944, at the age of 26.

Finally, Fuson played just one season for the Vols, sharing time with Nowling at fullback on the 1942 team that finished 9-1-1.  He, like Klarer, was a Kentucky native, hailing from Middlesboro. He enlisted in the Army in 1943 and was killed in action in Germany on Dec. 4, 1944, while serving with the 84th Infantry Division.

“These four courageous men made the ultimate sacrifice for this country,” Hamilton said at the time he made the decision to retire the numbers. “We recognized them in the past, but this is a good opportunity for us to recognize their families on the field. It is of significance the ceremony will be during the Air Force game, when UT plays one of the many honorable branches of the military.”

These four men are legendary, just as are the others who died fighting for us throughout the years. Hollywood may glamorize death, but those that come in battle are often gruesome, gritty and heartbreaking to those left behind. It’s easy to think of football as a safe haven, no matter how violent it is, but the bottom line is these are 18-22-year-old kids “battling” on our television sets. During World War II, these were the same kids who were dying by the thousands on foreign soil.

So, enjoy your day off tomorrow. Enjoy all the trappings of freedom that we have. But find a soldier and thank him or her for the sacrifices they and their families make every single day. Then think of those who didn’t make it home to hug their loved ones one last time.

We may “live and die” with every Vols play. But these men literally died protecting us, preserving our way of life and honoring what it means to be an American. Thank you all, gentlemen — and to all the ladies and gentlemen who serve us still.

You are the legends, in the truest sense of the world.

Ten Ideas for Non-Conference Scheduling in Basketball

While we’ve been kicking around ideas for Tennessee’s non-conference future in football and looking at what the rest of the league has done in that department, Tennessee’s basketball team announced two games for next year. The Vols have a neutral site date with Gonzaga and a visit from West Virginia in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge. The basketball team, fresh off an SEC Championship and a three seed in the NCAA Tournament, will be carrying the torch for the athletic department in the short-term. And with Rick Barnes’ track record, there are plenty of reasons to believe they can sustain this kind of success.

That being the case, the Vols can resume the fearless non-conference scheduling in basketball Barnes employed at Texas (and Bruce Pearl employed at Tennessee). Gonzaga, for instance, is just about the best friend your RPI can have: in the last six years the Bulldogs are 193-28 overall. They’re a smart addition to a 2018-19 schedule that includes return visits from Wake Forest and Georgia Tech which don’t look as tough as we hoped when they were scheduled. The Memphis rivalry is back, but give Penny Hardaway a minute before expecting more from the Tigers after a 40-26 run from Tubby Smith. Tennessee will also get two of Kansas, Louisville, and Marquette in the preseason NIT in November.

Getting West Virginia in the SEC/Big East Challenge is a nice addition, and continues to show how the event schedules to your reputation: in the last four years the Vols have played TCU, Iowa State, and Kansas State twice. If Tennessee continues to excel in basketball, they’ll continue to have more exciting match-ups in this series.

And if the Vols are indeed excelling, they should continue to schedule up in non-conference play. I have no doubt Rick Barnes will continue to pursue championship-caliber competition outside the SEC. In doing so, here are a few ideas centered around teams the Vols haven’t hosted in a long time, if ever (thanks again to those who work hard to produce Tennessee’s media guide, where all this info is pulled from):

Never Played in Knoxville:

  • UCLA – The Vols and Bruins met once in Atlanta in 1977, both ranked in the Top 10 at the time.
  • Notre Dame – The Irish beat Tennessee in the second round of the 1979 NCAA Tournament, the only meeting between the two schools.
  • Indiana – Four neutral site meetings, the last in the 1985 NIT semifinals in New York City. But the Vols and Hoosiers have never met on each other’s home floors.
  • Villanova – Two meetings in Philadelphia in 1950 and 1971, then the 2011 preseason NIT and last year in the Bahamas. But the defending champs have never been to Knoxville.

It’s Been a Minute:

  • Duke – Fifteen meetings all-time, but only one since 1980 (2011 Maui). The Blue Devils haven’t been to Knoxville since 1976. It’s been so long, Duke was only ranked in two of those 15 meetings.
  • Purdue – A home-and-home in 1980-81 is the only on-campus meeting between the Vols and Boilermakers, who played a pair of classics in preseason tournaments in the 2009-10 and 2017-18 seasons.
  • Arizona – A home-and-home in 1982-83, then the first game of the year in Albuquerque during the 1998-99 season.
  • Michigan – The bane of our NCAA Tournament existence in 2011 and 2014, the Wolverines were in Knoxville for a 1984-85 home-and-home.
  • Cincinnati – Four meetings in the 1950s, then a home-and-home in 1992-93.
  • Michigan State – The Vols and Spartans played a home-and-home in 1993-94, then met in the 2010 Elite Eight. Rick Barnes scheduled a bunch of neutral site games with Tom Izzo during his time at Texas.

Duke is an obvious choice (as is Texas from a fan and TV perspective, but I don’t think Barnes wants to go there). But who else would you like to see the Vols face?

Tennessee linebacker Darrin Kirkland Jr. to transfer

Vols linebacker Darrin Kirkland Jr. announced via Twitter late this afternoon that he is electing to leave Tennessee for another school as a graduate transfer:

 

First of all, best of luck to Kirkland.

But there’s no getting around it: This is a big loss for Tennessee. Here’s what we wrote about Kirkland in our Vols preseason magazine this year:

Perhaps the biggest key to the success of the Tennessee
linebacking corps this fall is the return of Kirkland. Kirkland
made the All-SEC Freshman Team in 2015 after playing
in all 13 games and starting 10 of them. After injuring his
ankle in the second game of the 2016 season, he played in
only eight games and wasn’t the same even when he was on
the field. Last fall, a knee injury in fall camp sidelined him
for the entire season. This offseason, he had another minor
knee surgery, but made it back onto the practice field late in
spring camp. He’s expected to be back and healthy this fall,
but whether he can stay that way is the question weighing on
everyone’s minds. If he can, he will be a difference-maker.

So much for that.

And so much for Brad’s “Hey, at least nobody’s transferred!” post from yesterday. Yes, we’re blaming him, and so should you.

Gameday Today: When Al Wilson gets hyped, it’s time to get hyped

Football

We are (probably!) under 100 days (or so!) away from football season!

When Al Wilson gets hyped, it’s time to get hyped. And Al Wilson is hyped about the return of Phillip Fulmer and the arrival of Jeremy Pruitt.

News Flash. An anonymous opposing coach tells Lindy’s that Butch Jones didn’t do a good job last year. If I was still 14, I would say, “Duh.” If I was 8, I’d say, “A-doy.”

Good news. Brad thinks that the lack of expected post-coaching-change attrition may signal that the players currently on Tennessee’s roster actually want to be coached.

A year early, but we’ll take it. Jimmy Hyams hits the gas by reminding Vols fans of the first-year-to-second-year jumps at LSU by Nick Saban, at Alabama by Saban, with Mark Richt and Kirby Smart at Georgia, and Bob Stoops at Oklahoma. He then slams on the brakes:

But you wonder if Saban or Richt or Stoops or Smart faced at their new schools what Pruitt faces at Tennessee.

Yeah.

Saturday Down South asks Pruitt some interesting questions, including his thoughts on how recruiting has changed recently and which positions he thinks have the best opportunity for early playing time.

Coach Pruitt continues to Say Stuff during his Big Orange Caravan Tour, and he’s apparently making more of an effort to not rub fans the wrong way.

Also this: GoVols247 is ranking the entire Tennessee roster. Here’s Nos. 45-31. . . . The Vols have hired VFL CJ Fayton as Director of VFL Programming.

Hoops

Tennessee’s basketball team will play Gonzaga in Phoenix on December 9 this fall. It should be a good one, as the Vols are No. 3 in Gary Parrish’s preseason Top 25 and Gonzaga is No. 5. Tennessee is also likely to host either Kansas (No. 1) or West Virginia (No. 17) in this season’s Big 12/SEC Challenge.

Awwww. Admiral Schofield got up at 4:00 a.m. to watch the royal wedding with his mother.

Other fun stuff

Ladies and gentlemen, Terry Fair:

Tennessee is winning at APR.

SB Nation has everything you need to know about the recent Supreme Court ruling on sports betting.

Vols hoops hits No. 3 in CBSSports’ preseason Top 25

CBSSports‘ Gary Parrish published his college hoops Top 25 yesterday, and he has the Vols slotted in at No. 3. Tennessee’s in lofty company, as Kansas and Duke come in at Nos. 1 and 2, respectively. There’s another basketball blueblood on the other side of UT, too, with the SEC rival Kentucky taking up residence at the fourth position.

Gonzaga, Virginia, Villanova (only because of the presumed early departures of a couple of guys to the NBA), Nevada, North Carolina, and Auburn round out the Top 10.

Ever since the hoops season concluded, it hasn’t been unheard of to see Tennessee in next season’s preseason Top 10, but No. 3 is as high as I’ve seen. Why is Parrish that bullish on the Vols?

Tennessee should return most of the important pieces from a team that shared the SEC regular-season title. More specifically, the top six scorers are back — among them SEC Player of the Year Grant Williams. So it’ll come as no surprise when the Vols finish at, or near, the top of the league again.

Sounds reasonable, as everyone expects Admiral Schofield to return despite having been testing the NBA waters himself. Only James Daniel is gone from last year’s team, one that won the right to wear those SEC Championship t-shirts, and Richmond graduate transfer Khwan Fore has committed to the Vols.

It’s not a given that even a team with an identical roster to last year would necessarily be able to duplicate or surpass its success. After all, the circumstances have changed. They’ll now be the hunted, and they’ll have to transition from negative motivation (no one believing in them) to something else. But if they can manage those things, it should be a fun season this fall for Vols hoops.

Maybe These Vols Want to Be Coached, After All

 

The Tennessee Vols are soft, they said. They haven’t been coached. They’re awful. The program is in shambles. There’s going to be a mass exodus of players this offseason once the new sheriff comes to town.

Right?

Well, we’re waiting.

Where are they?

Still waiting…

You haven’t seen it yet? Me, either. Instead, what we saw was a bunch of the same ol’ Vols going through spring drills, getting the tough love dished at them every day from new coach Jeremy Pruitt and his no-nonsense staff. And, while there may yet be several defections — there always are every year, after all — we haven’t seen any. All we’ve heard is praise, folks buying into the new way; what little we heard from the players this spring.

It’s enough to make me think that we won’t see anymore than the normal attrition that every major college football program has every year, regardless of — and especially when there’s — a coaching change. Has it occurred to anybody that maybe these Vols wanted to be coached, all along?

Has it occurred to you that maybe it was the former UT coaching staff that was soft, and not the players?

After all, Butch Jones and crew are the ones who did these kids a disservice by employing three strength and conditioning coordinators in the past three years, one of which who was a glorified intern, at best. These are the ones who fudged the injury list every game after the ridiculous cloak-and-dagger game that included, many times, blatant lies to the media about players who were hurt. (Anybody tripped over a helmet lately???) These are the ones who threw their players under the bus at times, talking around the idea that eventually, the coaches stop and the players must play.

But what if players aren’t taught how to play?

Part of player development is teaching young men how to be men. That includes playing when you aren’t feeling at your best, reaching down and grabbing a little more that you didn’t think you had in you, pushing the limits and digging for that something extra that made them, in a way, transcend what they thought they could be. For all the talk about 63 effort — about making three effort plays within the six-second timeframe that a standard play takes — how much effort was the former staff putting into pushing these kids?

Not only did they do them a disservice getting them ready to play football, many times, they erred on the side of not playing on the field any time there was a minor issue.

Listen: This is football; there are injuries. Players get hurt. We saw plenty of them this spring, and it’s not always easy for people to realize the difference between being injured and being hurt. That line was too often blurred during the Jones era, and that goes in both directions. Ask Brett Kendrick about playing through a concussion.

Like he proved in every aspect of the game beyond promotion, Jones was in over his head.

But we’re not just talking about injuries here. We’re talking about literal development — player improvement over the course of time. Jones proved he couldn’t do it, and though Pruitt hasn’t proved he can either as a head coach, his assistant resume speaks for itself. So do the many players his staff have placed in the league over many years across many programs.

You think guys don’t see that? You think they don’t want it? What Todd Kelly Jr., Shy Tuttle or Jarrett Guarantano wouldn’t have given to actually be coached the first few years of their careers. For players such as Khalil McKenzie and Jashon Robertson, the transition came too late. Whether Kelly, Tuttle, Jonathan Kongbo, Kyle Phillips [and similar talented, underutilized, undeveloped players] can surge enough in 2018 to salvage the semblance of what they were expected to be in college remains to be seen, but they can do a lot to help UT have a respectable season this year and salvage something for the program’s future.

So far, Quay Picou has left the program. That’s really about it. Again, there will be more, sure. But we aren’t seeing the floodgates open. If Keller Chryst comes in and starts over Guarantano, you could make an argument that he could leave. But, really, if he can’t beat out a graduate transfer in Year 3, can he really blossom into an SEC star, anyway?

Pruitt said after the Orange & White Game that some players “flat-out quit.” He didn’t call out any names, but he alluded to there being difficult conversations post-spring that would essentially be “come-to-Pruitt” meetings. I personally expected five or six dudes to hit the road soon after those drills ended. They didn’t.

Hey, listen, they may still. We may see a deluge of guys exit the program over the next couple of weeks, and I’ll look back at this column and feel like an idiot. Truthfully, there are probably a few guys — if not more than “a few” — hanging around the program who should leave if they ever want to play a down of football. Pruitt even experimented the last week-plus of spring putting players out of their comfort zones, trying them in other positions. Part of that reason is to see if there was any “hidden talent” that could help the team right away. Part of the reason was he realized some of the dudes he moved simply weren’t every going to contribute where they were.

Tis the nature of the game.

Some players will go; move on to lesser programs where they can play. But after the “soft” Jones era, I expected a bunch of his recruits to see that things were going to be my-way-or-the-highway under Pruitt and say, “Screw this, I’m taillights.”

That hasn’t happened. I’m kinda proud of that.

Maybe a lot of these kids want to learn to play football, after all.

Tennessee hires VFL CJ Fayton as Director of VFL Programming

Tennessee AD Phillip Fulmer announced yesterday that he has hired VFL CJ Fayton as Director of VFL Programming.

What, exactly, does a “Director of VFL Programming” do, you ask? Fayton will reportedly be responsible for helping current student-athletes (in all sports, not just football) with career and professional development and also for keeping other VFLs actively involved with Tennessee. He’ll work under the direction of Fulmer and interact with alumni relations and the marketing department.

As a wide receiver at Tennessee from 2002-05, Fayton earned SEC All-Academic Team honors twice. He also played on the basketball team a short time during the 2000-01 season. He received a degree in Sport Management in 2005, a Master’s degree in Recreation Administration in 2008, and a juris doctorate in 2014. He’s also served as a development assistant with Tennessee’s VASF staff, a recruiting assistant and graduate assistant for the football program, an assistant coach at Norfolk State (2010-11), a compliance assistant at Vanderbilt (2012-13), and a law clerk a year before getting his law degree from UT Law School in 2014. Most recently, he was Associate Athletics Director at Maryville College.

 

Tennessee Recruiting: Vols Stay Hot; Gain Pledge from Top JUCO LB Lakia Henry

 

Things may have gotten off slowly for new Tennessee head coach Jeremy Pruitt in 2019 recruiting, but things certainly have picked up lately. The Vols received a huge pledge on Sunday, getting a commitment from Lakia Henry.

The nation’s top-ranked JUCO linebacker according to the 247Sports composite rankings visited Knoxville this past week and followed it up with trips to Nebraska and Ole Miss. But he couldn’t get Rocky Top off his mind.

Now, though he told GoVols247’s Ryan Callahan that he still plans on taking some trips, he chose to commit to Tennessee, Pruitt and lead recruiter Kevin Sherrer. The defensive coordinator recruits South Georgia, where from where the Dodge City (Kansas) Community College prospect originally hails, and the two have established a strong bond. The Vols will continue to recruit Henry with teams such as Alabama and Texas A&M hot after him, too, but Henry is in the house with a verbal pledge.

You can give an assist to UT graduate assistant Joe Osovet, a former JUCO head coach who was instrumental in luring Henry.

He told Callahan that UT is “the place I want to be.” That’s a big deal considering the Vols desperately want him, too. He’s the nation’s top-ranked JUCO LB and the third overall transfer pledge in the class. With Pruitt trying to rebuild and reload the Vols in a hurry, he immediately fits what Tennessee needs.

Henry is 6’0″, 233 pounds, can fly, and arrives with a vengeance. He is a versatile ‘backer and a weapon that looks like an Alabama or Georgia linebacker, much like J.J. Peterson, UT’s big ’18 commit of the Pruitt regime. Henry can play sideline-to-sideline, and the Vols should be able to use him much the way Pruitt did with Reuben Foster at Alabama.

Much like the Vols have done with virtually all their pledges of the Pruitt regime, Henry adds to the size on the roster. Tennessee must essentially revamp its roster, purging it from the Butch Jones mentality of speed and eschewing size. Pruitt needs bigger bodies for his 3-4 scheme, and he wants bigger bodies on the offensive line and at tight end and the skill positions to run a pro-style scheme. Henry continues that trend.

He’s the third commit for Tennessee in the past nine days, joining tight end Sean Brown and wide receiver Ramel Keyton. The Vols’ recent surge began with 5-star offensive lineman Wanya Morris, and the run in Georgia started then, too. All of the mentioned prospects hail from the Peach State, which is going to be a major part of UT getting back to where it wants to be.

Tennessee continues to inch up in the SEC rankings, moving to 15th nationally and eighth in the conference with the latest pledge. Though this isn’t supposed to be a huge class, the Vols currently sit in a favorable position with some of the nation’s top players.

Five-star running back/outside linebacker Quavarius Crouch and 5-star offensive lineman Darnell Wright, 4-star cornerbacks Tyus Fields, Devin Bush and Jaydon Hill, 3-star outside linebacker/defensive end Terrell Dawkins, defensive end Savion Jackson, weak-side defensive end Khris Bogle, running back John Emery, wide receiver Jalen Curry, receiver Khafre Brown, linebacker Kane Patterson, athlete Ronald Thompkins and more hold the Vols in high regard.

It’s going to be interesting to see the class shapes up over the next few months. Some storylines to follow are what the Vols are going to do at quarterback, if they begin to surge with running backs and if they can continue the momentum they’ve built with Crouch and Wright.

One thing is clear: Pruitt is recruiting with the big boys, and Henry is the latest example. UT’s class is really just starting, and the Vols are filling it with some elite playmakers. They’ll have to battle to keep Henry, but this is a big piece of the puzzle who should be able step right in and play immediately.