Tennessee at Alabama Preview

The race is on for the SEC title: Auburn opened the door with a one-point home loss to Texas A&M Wednesday night. The Tigers remain one game up on Tennessee with seven to play, two up if you’re looking to win this thing outright. The head-to-head police department is here to remind you it’s difficult to call the Vols SEC Champions with an entirely straight face if they finish tied with Auburn. But I’m sure we’ll take what we can get.

KenPom and RPI Forecast project the Vols to finish 13-5 in the SEC, a 5-2 homestretch. KenPom has Auburn at 14-4 (likewise 5-2), but RPI Forecast now projects them at 13-5. ESPN’s BPI predicts 13.8 conference wins for Auburn, 13.6 for Tennessee.

Here are the final seven games for each team, with win probabilities from KenPom:

Tennessee   Auburn
at Alabama 64% at Georgia 68%
South Carolina 90% Kentucky 75%
at Georgia 69% at South Carolina 72%
Florida 80% Alabama 83%
at Ole Miss 74% at Florida 55%
at Mississippi State 66% at Arkansas 60%
Georgia 87% South Carolina 89%

(Oddly enough, the Vols and Tigers have the exact same remaining home/away dates.)

A clearer SEC hierarchy is starting to take hold in KenPom. Tennessee remains seventh, with Auburn 10th after the loss to A&M. The Aggies are now the third-best team in the league in KenPom, living up to their non-conference body of work at #23. Kentucky, Missouri, and Florida are all between 28-36.

But over in the Bracket Matrix, there’s a slightly different pecking order. Auburn and Tennessee both find themselves in the chase for a one or, more likely, a two seed. Kentucky hovers as a five. From there, the SEC has five teams currently seeded between eight and ten.

Alabama is in the thick of that race. They are eighth in the league in KenPom (53rd overall), seventh in RPI (42nd), and a nine seed in the matrix. But their remaining schedule is a nightmare: Tennessee, LSU, at Kentucky, at Auburn, Arkansas, Florida, at Texas A&M. That’s six of the other seven SEC teams in the matrix left to play, and they’re coming off a loss at Mississippi State.

What Alabama does well:

  • Collin Sexton gets 18.6 points in 29.7 minutes, a projected lottery pick. I still think Tennessee’s biggest trouble spot is defending elite guard play; here’s another opportunity before the NCAA Tournament to see what we’ve learned. Bama doesn’t necessarily go as he goes: the Tide beat Auburn without him, while he put 23 on Missouri two weeks ago but the Tigers won.
  • Shot-blocking. The Tide are sixth nationally in block percentage, sending back 16.4% of opponent shots. 6’9″ Donta Hall is the leader here, 23rd nationally in individual block percentage and sending back 2.3 shots per game.
  • Defense, and generally all facets of it. The Tide give up just 31% from the arc on the year, 23rd nationally, and just 29.1% in SEC play. Opponents shoot just 41.1% against them overall. They’re 15th in KenPom’s defensive efficiency ratings. Alabama is 7-0 when holding opponents to 64 points or less, including wins over Rhode Island, Texas A&M, and Florida.

Where Alabama struggles is fairly straightforward:  threes and free throws. They beat Auburn and Oklahoma with above-average performances from the arc, shooting 18-of-42 (42.9%) combined. But on the year the Tide shoot 32.3% from three, 301st nationally. And they are 273rd from the line at just 68.4%.

Alabama’s overall offense isn’t consistent enough to win ugly, despite their great defense. The Tide are 1-7 when shooting less than 43.5%; by contrast, the Vols have nine wins while shooting below 43.5%. So even if Tennessee finds itself in Bama’s kind of game, the Vols are much better at winning ugly than they are.

6:00 PM Saturday on the SEC Network. Can the Vols sweep the week and survive what could be their most difficult test in these final seven games?

 

Gameday Today: Pruitt solves a mystery, stiff-arms gimmicks, and knows the best PR

Vols Football News

Mystery Solved. Pruitt has already diagnosed Tennessee’s injury problems of the past two seasons: We’re too small. He also doesn’t like players on the ground in practice and thinks you can teach a guy how to tackle well by learning how to “thud.”

The pendulum swings again. Number one, Pruitt ain’t gone do no gimmick uniforms:

“Well, I’m going to tell you this: When I grew up, when I associated Tennessee, I associated orange and white,” Pruitt said during the post-National Signing Day event at the Country Music Hall of Fame.
“I’m not trying to be disrespectful at all. But, to me, when you go play a football game, what color your uniforms (are) don’t really matter. So, when I think of Tennessee, I think of orange and white. I don’t think you need no gimmicks.”

And number two, he’s figured out something rather important:

“But, you know, probably the best PR we got is winning football games in the fall. I can come here, and these folks can like me, and we can talk and all that, but if we ain’t winning this fall or next fall, it don’t matter how many times I come over here. So I probably need to spend most of my time on the things that’s gonna help us win football games.”

 

We’re Bad, We’re Nationwide. Jeremy Pruitt says that recruiting locally (defined not only as the State of Tennessee but also as a five- to six-hour radius from Knoxville) is important, but that they also need to capitalize on the national recognition of the Tennessee brand.

Obi Wan San. Pruitt makes a great point in stating that it’s not about how much a coaching staff knows, it’s how much they can teach the players:

“The thing is,” Pruitt added, “it’s not about what we know about the opponent, it’s what they players know. To me, whether it’s 11-personnel runs or a defensive back having to give a wide receiver report, or what’s the opponent running in their stacks and bunches, you’re trying to figure it out.
“It’s good to hear the guys communicate it back. I think the great ones take pride in it.”
Wait, what? New strength and conditioning coach Craig Fitzgerald is the only guy on Pruitt’s staff with whom Pruitt “had no prior relations.” This is where you make your own jokes, because I’ve already deleted three.
Nobody’s perfect, but for some there’s proof. Pruitt says the whole Jauan Jennings thing is “one day at a time.” He seems to understand both that kids make mistakes and that there are consequences for those mistakes:
“One of the first things when I got to Tennessee, Coach Fulmer, he filled me in on the situation,” Pruitt answered. “The way I look at it is this: There ain’t no perfect folks in this room. There ain’t no perfect coaches. There ain’t no perfect players. And if they had Instagram and all that stuff back when we were all growing up, some of us might not be in this room.
“I’ll say this: Jauan knows he made a mistake. He’s embarrassed by it, and I think we’re going to give him an opportunity in-house to find his way back on the team. But — and there’s always a but with it, right? — he’s got to do that. There ain’t going to be nothing given to him and he knows that. It’s a long ways to go and we’ll see. Hopefully he can do that.”

Football Coaching Staff

Tennessee finally and officially announced its football coaching staff yesterday and boasted of their collective achievements:

They also released the staff’s salaries, if you’re interested.

Recruiting

DylanVol takes a closer look at the linebackers in the Class of 2018.

Tennessee secured the commitment of 4-star offensive tackle Jackson Lampley of Montgomery Bell Academy.

Hoops

More rat poison, saying that Tennessee basketball is the best team in the conference:


Mmm. I love the taste of rat poison in the morning.

Lamonte Turner, who carried the Vols in the first half win over Kentucky, got a little winded and so prodded Jordan Bowden to take the torch for a little while. Bowden scored 11 points in the second half.

Admiral Schofield is a man with his head screwed on right:

“One of the biggest things we talked about, Kentucky was 17-6 and people were questioning their team — and we’re 17-5 and people are saying that’s the best they’ve seen here in a while,” Schofield said. “Why is that OK? We want more. We have to keep playing like men.”

Right on.

Other fun stuff

The No. 11 Lady Vols beat Arkansas 90-85 on the strength of a career-high 33 points and 14 rebounds from Rennia Davis. Highlights:

And the Lady Vols softball team, which is ranked No. 11, beat No. 19 Arizona State, 7-4.

Tennessee Recruiting: Jackson Lampley Gets ’19 Class Started With a Bang

The only way to put a forgettable ’18 National Signing Day in the rearview mirror is to move ahead to the 2019 recruiting class, and new Tennessee coach Jeremy Pruitt and Co., already have started building relationships they had to rush in this year’s haul.

One of those new relationships paid off with a big commitment on Thursday, just one day after the finishing touches were put on a successful half-class for the Vols.

UT legacy Jackson Lampley went public with his pledge to Pruitt and his staff, after committing to them privately a few weeks ago. Volquest.com’s Austin Price broke the news, and it’s not only a big-time player, it also comes at a major need position.

During his first few classes, former UT coach Butch Jones thrived on getting Vol legacies to commit to their family school with mixed results. Perhaps the biggest miss in that area came this past cycle when 5-star offensive tackle Cade Mays decommitted from Tennessee and spurned the Vols to play for hated rival Georgia. Mays left his UT commitment when Jones’ final season began spiraling out of control, and he didn’t give Pruitt a fair chance to lure him back.

Lampley made certain early on he wouldn’t do the same. His dream has always been to play for the Big Orange, and he made that a reality with his pledge. The 4-star offensive tackle from Montgomery Bell Academy is the nation’s No. 211 player on 247Sports, and is a top-300 prospect in the Composite rankings.

The 6’4″, 299-pound lineman already boasted offers from plenty of top programs, choosing UT over LSU, Auburn, Florida, Wisconsin, South Carolina, Arkansas, Mississippi State, Penn State and many others. His early 247Sports profile has this to say about his initial evaluation:

Lampley gets off the ball well and has a strong initial punch. He shows good power and strength. Lampley is comfortable run blocking or in pass pro. He is a good athlete and has good flexibility. Lampley is relentless and plays until the whistle blows. He can play too high at times, so he needs to improve his pad level, but he has a lot of natural ability and his best football is ahead.

Tennessee hopes to pair Lampley with 5-star West Virginia offensive lineman Darnell Wright, whom Pruitt already has met with multiple times. The Vols are aggressively starting the ’19 class, and with needs all over the field, getting Lampley is a great start. Two of Lampley’s friends are instate 4-star defensive end Joseph Anderson, and 4-star defensive end Bill Norton who already have offers from most of the major programs in the country. This can’t hurt UT’s pursuit of those two.

This upcoming season is another banner year instate, and though Pruitt and Co. are getting a late start in building relationships, this is a quality commitment who can get started with peer recruiting. Players like Trey Knox, Lance Wilhoite, Maurice Hampton, Norton, Woodi Washington and many others make this a loaded class in the Volunteer State. It’s a good opportunity for Pruitt to flex his recruiting muscle and put a subpar close to this past class behind him.

It always helps to get a player of Lampley’s ilk to get things rolling. His father, Brad, played offensive line for the Vols in the 1990s and was part of former coach and current athletic director Phillip Fulmer’s first recruiting class at UT. Lampley’s bloodlines run deep, and orange blood flows through those veins.

Pruitt has made it clear that he’ll go anywhere in the country to find the best players, but he didn’t have to travel far to get the one that started the 2019 class in fashion. Lampley was in UT’s back yard, and he will have every opportunity to step in, learn under Will Friend and be a key component in Pruitt’s rebuild.

Class of 2018 Positional Review: Linebacker

Yesterday we took a look at easily the best position of the 2018 class, the Defensive Line, a nice companion piece to the post-Early Signing Day look at the overall DL.  Next up is a look at Linebacker, which along with the DL will look different in Jeremy Pruitt’s and Kevin Sherrer’s 3-4 scheme than it has in a while.  After adding JUCO star Jordan Allen in the Early Signing period, Tennessee signed arguably the best overall player in its class yesterday in JJ Peterson, giving the Vols two very talented LBs in the class, both of whom will be expected to contribute immediately.  Obviously the Vols missed on 5-star Quay Walker, who many thought was a Tennessee lean until his visit to UGA last weekend – Walker would have taken this LB class to a whole other level, but alas he’ll now be playing in Athens instead.

Peterson, who the Vols beat out Alabama for, is the kind of elite player that Tennessee simply does not have enough of, and therefore should be expected to be an instant impact guy.  He can really do it all: rush the QB off the edge, make plays in space, and even drop into coverage. He is talented enough to play any of the LB positions in the 3-4.  As it pertains to Tennessee’s relatively disappointing Signing Day, it must be remembered that had Peterson chosen to not go public with his commitment back in early January his signing would have been celebrated much more.

Allen is more of a pass-rushing stand-up 3-4 OLB.  He has great size, speed and athleticism and projects as a guy who could get a lot of reps immediately since he was brought in specifically for the 3-4.  Both being on campus for spring and the fact that he’s a JUCO prospect enhance his overall value and increase the likelihood that he’ll be ready to contribute right away.

When it comes to the overall LB corps, Tennessee has some real talent already on campus to go along with the two high-level talents of Peterson and Allen.  Darren Kirkland has shown that when healthy he’s an All-SEC type player.  Daniel Bituli had a really great season on a really crappy team in 2017, and could be paired with Kirkland, Will Ignot (who in my opinion is an elite-level prospect) and Peterson on the inside to form a really strong quartet of ILBs.  Quart’e Sapp and Austin Smith are two guys with top-shelf athleticism who will help on the outside, and Solon Paige and Shanon Reid give the Vols some young depth here as well.

One wildcard here is Sophomore-to-be Maleik Gray.  Gray is a bit of a tweener in that he currently is too small to play a traditional LB role but might not have enough speed to play at a high level in the secondary.  As one of the too-few elite type players on Tennessee’s roster, though, Pruitt and Sherrer must find a way to get this Gray on the field somehow.  I envision him as a Jabril Peppers at Michigcan type of player – a disruptor who plays close to the line of scrimmage (like a LB) an either blitzes or plays the run but is more than capable of covering RBs and TEs if not Slot WRs as well.

It will be up to Defensive Coordinator Sherrer (who was previously UGA’s ILB coach) and LB Coach Chris Rumph to get the most out of a LB corps that while short on proven talent has a lot of options and legitimate talent as well.

Gameday Today: Vols’ National Signing Day recap

The general consensus on National Signing Day for the Vols is that although the day was a bit of a clunker, Tennessee still ended up with a good class, especially along the defensive line.

Here are the guys the Vols signed yesterday:

The Vols were in the running for several others but just couldn’t reel them in. Here’s a list of everybody who was on Tennessee’s board yesterday morning and where they ended up.

If you want to risk it, we also have a Twitter timeline of just the guys who were on the board yesterday so you can see what they’re saying this morning.

If you haven’t yet watched the Vols’ National Signing Day event, you should. It’s not just an opportunity to hear more about the new guys in the Class of 2018, it’s an opportunity to get to know the almost entirely new coaching staff. You’ll be glad you did.

Hoops

Jimmy Dykes mentions the phrase “1-seed” when asked about the Vols:

And VFL Josh Richardson had a career night:

WATCH: The Tennessee National Signing Day Event Video

If you haven’t had the chance or the inclination to watch last night’s National Signing Day event, do yourself a favor and carve out some time. I meant to just scroll through to see what was going on but ended up watching nearly the whole thing despite an incredibly busy day on tap.

The main reason to watch is that it’s our first chance to really get to know the staff. Each guy took some time with the microphone and talked not only about the guys they signed in this class but also about their particular roles on the staff and the philosophy they’ll use to accomplish their goals.

Have a look and listen. It’s a recorded stream, so the actual event doesn’t start until about 10 minutes in.

A couple of the most notable highlights:

  • Pruitt likes this class, and he says that every guy they signed fits their criteria, but he was also adamant that this day next year will be different once his guys are given an entire year to work.
  • The Vols still have room and actually aren’t done recruiting for this year’s class.

National Signing Day 2018: Hard Dose of Reality for Vols Coach Jeremy Pruitt

Hey, listen: Let’s just call National Signing Day 2018 what it was, independent of passing judgment on any of the kids who signed to be Tennessee Volunteers and without heaping criticism on new UT coach Jeremy Pruitt.

Today was an awful ending to a good recruiting class.

Yes, the Vols had some eventful moments, signing key-need players like plucking 3-star safety Trevon Flowers away from Clemson and others, 3-star defensive tackle John Mincey from South Carolina and 3-star JUCO defensive tackle Emmit Gooden from West Virginia.

They also received commitments/signed Georgia defensive tackle Kurott Garland, Las Vegas receiver Cedric Tillman and Chattanooga safety Joseph Norwood — none of which had any offers from major programs.

The biggest coup of the day was 4-star JJ Peterson — the nation’s top outside linebacker — who followed through with his commitment and chose the Vols over late overtures from Alabama, giving Pruitt an instant-impact weapon for his rebuilding, revamped defense. None of that can — or should — be overlooked.

But today was about the players the Vols didn’t get.

Yes, I know that’s exactly what Pruitt told us not to do, dwell on the players Tennessee missed on but be excited about the ones it signed. Heck, I told you not a week ago that we couldn’t dwell on the misses.

After Wednesday’s fallout, though, that’s like the old saying about asking Mrs. Lincoln about the play.

Pruitt entered his first [mini] recruiting cycle swinging for the fences, aiming at marquee players who were unsigned, hell-bent on bringing at least a couple of them to Knoxville. None of those materialized in commitments.

Zero. Zilch. Nada.

Sure, guys like Flowers, Mincey and Peterson were key cogs to this class regardless of how the end shook out. They were always going to have a spot. But Pruitt also brought in top-notch players at major-need positions on official visits, only to watch all those guys decide to sign elsewhere.

Not only that, but 4-star running back Anthony Grant and 4-star receiver Jordan Young flipped their commitments from Tennessee and signed with Florida State, adding insult to injury.

The rocky finish began on Saturday when offensive tackle Dylan Wonnum elected to join his brother at South Carolina. Then, beginning with the early-morning news of Grant’s flip on Wednesday, the tone was set.

There was a brief respite with good news from Mincey and Flowers mid-morning, but that was the last real ray of the day’s light.

One by one, Vols fans watched television or refreshed internet screens in horror.

Not only did rival Georgia beat out the Vols for stud linebacker Quay Walker’s signature, Walker showed up UT by putting on a Vols hat and then flipping it across the room before picking the Dawgs in a classless gesture. It’s hard to say what was worse — that charade or the fact that Young would have been an unknown receiver at West Virginia State had the Vols not found him, and he repaid Pruitt by signing with FSU.

While Pruitt tried to build a relationship with Taiyon Palmer, his long-standing rapport with the North Carolina State staff led to him signing with the Wolfpack.

Defensive tackle Otito Ogbonnia decided to play for Chip Kelly at UCLA.

Tight end Glen Beal — who was thought to be leaning to UT just mere days ago — chose Texas A&M.

Then, star cornerback Olaijah Griffin picked USC despite saying Tennessee had a big lead a month ago following his official visit.

While Tennessee got some good vibes from receiver Jacob Copeland throughout the morning, he ultimately signed with Florida over the Vols and Alabama.

Finally, Isaac Taylor-Stuart capped off the night by joining Griffin in the Trojans’ defensive backfield.

Walker was a tough blow, simply because he had a long-standing relationship with Pruitt and defensive coordinator Kevin Sherrer, and the Vols thought they were right in the thick of things until the end. It was also a disappointment that UT struck out with players at a major-need position of cornerback. Griffin and Taylor-Stuart stayed out West, long-shot Tyson Campbell joined UGA’s sterling class in Athens, and one-time strong UT lean Eddie Smith picked Alabama. Oh, and Palmer going to NC State hurt, too.

Tennessee wound up signing some potentially good players on Wednesday, but the Vols missed on every single big name.

I’m no expert on reading body language, but Pruitt did not seem to be very happy at his post-NSD press conference. After all, this is a man who has been at Alabama, Georgia and FSU and won some major recruiting battles. He, along with UGA coach Kirby Smart, are arguably the top two recruiting assistants of the past decade.

He isn’t used to days like this.

But, the sad truth of the matter, Vols fans, is this: He ain’t in Tuscaloosa anymore.

We all look at our proud football program as the national powerhouse of old, but it isn’t that, anymore. Not right now. It can be again, but the sobering reality is that we’re coming off a 4-8 season that marked the first time in program history with eight losses and also the first time ever where the Vols failed to win a conference game.

Even in the best of years in the Butch Jones regime, UT went 9-4. Following his debacle of a final year that was rife with negativity, Tennessee went through a very public, very embarrassing coaching search where Greg Schiano was forced into our face, a rebellion ensued, an athletic director was fired, and they could have sold “Honk if you turned down Tennessee” bumper stickers in the coaching community.

Yes, we look like we came out better for it all with Phillip Fulmer as the athletic director, and a real football guy in Pruitt as the head coach. He built a quality staff of assistant coaches with rich pedigrees in recruiting, Southeast ties and player development.

For whatever reason, though, that didn’t translate with signatures Wednesday. There was some impressive immediate success as the Vols loaded up with one of the most noteworthy early signing periods, adding a slew of quality players back in December.

But the backstretch wasn’t kind to Pruitt.

He went back to Alabama to coach the Crimson Tide to the national championship, and though he didn’t lose any real recruiting time, there was a bit of a scramble mode in the way things were handled down the stretch. Perhaps it’s a lesson learned, especially with the way Pruitt managed some early recruiting official visits and some of his own in-home visits. Some think he mismanaged those — such as getting Griffin and Walker in on their OVs early, allowing the Tennessee shine to wear off and others to swoop in.

Also, it can be argued that perhaps Pruitt swung too vigorously at the top-shelf prospects. After all, these are the nation’s elite, and programs have been building relationships with them for years. Pruitt tried to come in and build a rapport in a matter of weeks. But, again, what do you do? Put all your efforts toward lesser players? As you already know, I like the aggressive style, but it just didn’t pay off this time around.

Everything is magnified when you have a day like the Vols did Wednesday, one that will go down as one of the all-time clunkers in the modern era of UT recruiting. The recruiting class wound up fine, but the Vols far from stuck the landing, to say the least.

Make no mistake, again: This is a good class. Pruitt DID do a good job. He inherited a class ranked in the 60s, and the Vols are currently 20th on the 247Sports Composite rankings and 20th in Rivals. That’s only good enough for eighth in the rugged SEC, and it pales in comparison to the monstrous class Georgia put together that rivals any single haul ever assembled. But with all the turmoil, maybe a top-20 class is all we should have expected.

That’s not what the grumbles are for. The majority of rational Vols recruiting followers are glad to have the players who signed, they’re OK with a top-20 class and can find positives in the lessons we learned from Pruitt’s brief-but-aggressive first few months trying to sway players and be excited about how that will translate when this staff has a full recruiting cycle to build relationships.

Instead, we’re all mad because of what might have been. Pruitt hamstrung himself by expanding the board, getting all our hopes up with visits from the nation’s top players and then failing to land any of them on Wednesday.

What we’ve got to remember, though, in evaluating this product is that we need to look at the whole class and not just the ending of it. Is it really “failing” to land a lot of guys you never had a chance at all until the new coach brought them in, or was it wishful thinking to get any of them in the first place?

So, before you go off spouting about “Pruitt can’t close,” remember that there were a lot of factors out of his control this year that contributed to Wednesday’s debacle. Could he have done some things differently? Sure. But there are also a lot of good players in this 2018 class who wouldn’t be in it if not for Pruitt and Co.

So, it’s possible to celebrate the class while calling Wednesday what it was: a Rocky Thud.

With a staff with this recruiting resume, though, better days are ahead, on the field and in the living rooms.

Defensive Line a Bright Spot on a Tough Day for the Vols

Although Tennessee struck out on most of its elite targets on National Signing Day, the Vols absolutely met their needs and then some on the Defensive Line.  Needing to stock the DL corps with more depth and talent, Coach Jeremy Pruitt, Defensive Coordinator Kevin Sherrer and Defensive Line Coach Chris Rumph added to UT’s Early Signing Day haul of Greg Emerson, Jordan Allen, Brant Lawless and Kingston Harris with three additional prospects.  The one defining trait you see in this DL class is size.  All seven of Tennessee’s signees are just big kids, and when you look back at the dominant Alabama DL’s of the last few years what you see if large humans and a lot of them.  Without a doubt that’s what Pruitt is trying to replicate at Tennessee, and this class jumpstarts that process in a hurry.

Emmit Gooden Gooden received an offer from Tennessee a couple of weeks ago but has been considered a real academic risk coming out of Independence C.C. in Kansas.  Something changed within the last few days, however, as the Vols welcomed him to Knoxville for an unofficial visit this past weekend.  Given that he signed with the Vols the Tennessee staff must feel confident enough that he will qualify.  If he does he’s an instant impact NG-type body for a team that very much needs one, as he’s a grown man and physically will be ready to play immediately

John Mincey Mincey is a large young man who will likely at least initially be a SDE in the Pruitt/Sherrer defense with the chance to grow into a player who can move inside.  The Vols beat out Will Muschamp and South Carolina for the former Arkansas commitment and he could be one of the better players in the class when it’s all said and done

Kurrott Garland Jordan Young’s high school teammate, Garland was similarly under-recruited until Tennessee brought him in along with Young for a mid-January visit.  At 6’3 and 250 lbs, Garland was hyper-productive the last two seasons, going for 126 tackles, 22 TFL, and 12 sacks his junior season and then following it up with 125 tackles and 12.5 sacks as a senior. He also was a playmaker, forcing three fumbles, recovering three others, intercepting a pass and defending three others. He played both NG and DE in high school and projects as a player who will grow into the ability to play across the DL for Tennessee

Of the seven Defensive Linemen signed by Tennessee, the two JUCO prospects (Jordan Allen and Emmit Gooden) and Greg Emerson (if healthy) project to be able to help the Vols immediately in 2018.  With Allen and Emerson on campus for Spring Practice we’ll get a better sense of exactly what Tennessee can get out of those two, but you don’t sign JUCOs to do anything other than contribute immediately and Gooden certainly has the size and physical maturity to do so.  Tennessee certainly has bodies on the DL now, with a total of 18 players at the position projected for 2018.  It will now be up to the aforementioned coaches to get the most out of them, but a lack of depth won’t be a problem and from this view there is some talent there as well.   This could be a position where I expect Tennessee to see immediate improvement from last season, and that’s before we get to overall better coaching.

Tennessee signs 3-star defensive tackle Kurott Garland

This one sort of came out of nowhere, but 3-star defensive tackle Kurott Garland of Conyers, Georgia has signed with Tennessee.

Relying again on the 247Sports Composite rankings, Garland is the nation’s No. 60 strongside defensive end and the No. 117 player in the state of Georgia. He had offers from Tulane, Coastal Carolina, and Eastern Kentucky.

Regardless of the offer list, Jeremy Pruitt is apparently high on the guy:

 

 

4-star defensive tackle Emmit Gooden signs with Vols football

Just before Jeremy Pruitt’s National Signing Day press conference, 4-star JUCO defensive lineman Emmit Gooden signed with Tennessee to play for the Vols.

Gooden is, according to the 247Sports Composite, the nation’s No. 17 JUCO prospect overall, the No. 7 JUCO defensive tackle, and the No. 4 JUCO player in the state of Tennessee.

Gooden was highly-coveted by a number of notable schools and held offers from the following:

  • Alabama
  • Georgia
  • USC
  • Florida
  • Arkansas
  • Mississippi State
  • Missouri
  • West Virginia
  • Arizona State
  • Louisville
  • Oklahoma
  • TCU
  • UAB
  • Texas-San Antonio

It appeared to come down to Tennessee and West Virginia, and at Gooden’s announcement ceremony, everybody with him had only one hat and chose the school represented by their hat. Gooden had only a West Virginia hat on his table, but when his turn arrived, he pulled a Tennessee hat out from under the table.