Tennessee Athletics Director John Currie Talks Vols Coaching Search

Tennessee athletics director John Currie showed his cat-like media reflexes Sunday afternoon, artfully dodging a direct question about Jon Gruden from a questioner at the press conference officially announcing UT coach Butch Jones’ firing.

But after hemming and hawing his way around several questions, dodging a few others and giving some good, insightful answers on other topics regarding the difficult 2017 Tennessee football season and offering a glimpse at the days ahead, Currie offered this bottom line:

“We’re standing here right now because we haven’t won enough,” said UT’s athletics director, who hasn’t been on the job even a year himself.

As the 4-6, 0-6 Vols begin their search to find Jones’ successor, that succinct response best captures Sunday’s press conference. Of nuts-and-bolts note from the short session:

  • Despite all the message board and social media speculation, the tabloid-type comments that followed departed Vol For Life coordinator Antone Davis’ exit from Tennessee and the rumors around offensive lineman Brett Kendrick’s concussion, Jones was not let go with cause. Therefore, UT will be responsible for the buyouts of the head coach and any staff members who aren’t retained or find other jobs.
  • According to Currie, that cost for Jones will be “somewhere in the $8.5 million range” and for the rest of the staff, “altogether in the $13 million range.” He said that’s a decision he “doesn’t take lightly,” but one he ultimately made.
  • As far as timing, when asked when he came to the realization that Jones needed to be fired today, Currie answered: “Really late last night, it was evident this was the direction we needed to go.” Reading between the lines here, it sounded like Currie’s decision that Jones didn’t need to coach UT in 2018 was made a while back; but he was more referring the decision to fire him now.
  • Currie made clear up front in the press conference that finding Tennessee’s next head football coach would be his “sole focus” and he’d lean on his internal team. When pressed about whether he’d hire a search firm, he reiterated twice, “not at this time.”
  • He also clarified that the media had better get their questions in Sunday because he won’t comment on the search until he’s announcing a new head coach. He did not give a timeline for a decision, only noting there would be some consideration given to the early signing period.
  • On his decision to name Brady Hoke as the interim: “Brady Hoke is a three-time coach of the year in three conferences. It was a very appropriate choice.”

As far as some analysis from the presser, Currie handled himself fairly well. Though he doesn’t appear to be at his best in front of the media, he doesn’t seem fazed at the enormity of hiring a coach at a place like Tennessee. The final judgment will be made upon announcement of Jones’ successor.

It’s no secret that Tennessee hasn’t been in the best financial shape in recent years thanks to the failings of former athletics director Mike Hamilton and the failed hirings and contract structure of football coaches [UT is looking for its fifth coach in 11 years, after all]. But Currie didn’t expect that money would be an issue.

“We can always use some more around here, but we know we have the resources to select the next leader of our football program,” he said. When asked about the pressure he should feel and his reputation being tied to the coaching hire he makes, Currie said, “I understand what’s at stake.”

And, later, he added, “My responsibility is to conduct the process as efficiently and effectively as possible.”

None of the media asked about Currie’s team and who’d be on it when he consulted decisions on the next coach. He did call former UT coach Phillip Fulmer — who is currently serving as an ambassador for the athletic department — an “extraordinary resources” and noted that he called Coach Fulmer this morning after firing Jones because he wanted to be aware of the situation.

One of Fulmer’s best teams — the 1997 SEC champions — will be honored at this week’s LSU game, and Currie spoke of several former players being supportive of the current team and their predicament while still noting that this year’s Vols can look those good ol’ days as a goal.

“Again, it should remind us of what it looks like and what it’s supposed to look like,” Currie said of honoring the ’97 team.

There were other topics discussed, too. But Currie deflected any negativity from the Jones regime. When asked about Davis, he said he wished the former VFL coordinator the best of luck but that report had “nothing to do with this decision.”

Listen: It’s not Currie’s place to lend any credence to the rumors and speculation that are out there. The Orlando Sentinel reported today that Jones called commitment Tanner Ingle and told him to “find a place to go, quickly.” Former Vol receiver and current radio personality Jayson Swain was told Jones has been making the call circuit to others as well.

If that’s true, it would be a disappointing decision for Jones, and it could negate his buyout if it’s in his contract that he won’t have any communication with recruits following his ouster. But when pressed on that issue at Sunday’s conference, Currie shrugged it off.

“I find that kind of stuff — speculative stuff — silly,” Currie said. “I trust Butch Jones and his character.”

Finally, when asked about Gruden, Currie said he’s going to remain silent during the duration of the search, so as to not “add to the misinformation” that will obviously be — and has already been — perpetuated across message boards, Twitter and in several reports.

This is the nature of Currie’s job, and though he’s obviously very uncomfortable in press conference environments, he’s going to be confident in whatever choice he’s making, and he’s not going to bat an eye or let public perception influence the decision he ultimately makes. After firing baseball coach Dave Serrano, a lot of names were thrown around, and UT ultimately wound up with Arkansas assistant Tony Vitello. The jury is obviously still out on Vitello, who hasn’t coached a single game, but he just signed the No. 8 recruiting class in the country. Will that translate onto the field? Who knows?

What Currie needs to realize — and what we all have to hope he does — is Tennessee football is a different animal. We can’t [and shouldn’t] have to go bargain-basement hunting or be looking for a rare baseball card in a field full of beat-up tobacco tins. We can get the best, and we should demand the best. Currie needs to be shopping at the high-end section of the coaching tree.

“None of us want to be in this position, but we are in this position, and now we move forward,” Currie said.

His decision may just be the biggest in the history of the program.

Tennessee Vols coaching candidate Dan Mullen

As Tennessee embarks on its fourth coaching search in ten years, here’s a quick look at Vols coaching candidate Dan Mullen.

Dan Mullen’s coaching experience (45 years old)

Assistant/GA at Wagner, Columbia, Syracuse, Notre Dame, Bowling Green and Utah from 1994-2004. Rode Urban Meyer’s coattails from Utah to Florida, where he found huge success as offensive coordinator with Tim Tebow, 2005-08. He’s been Mississippi State’s head coach since then.

GRT college football coach taxonomy: The Proven Winner, Level Three – Major Conference Contender; Guru (QBs; offense)

Why the Tennessee Vols might want Dan Mullen

There’s a familiarity there, and you also like the fact that he’s proven he can develop players and generate some big offensive numbers in the conference. Mullen is sharp-tongued, quick-witted and knows how to handle media and the fan base. He also has recruited and enjoyed success in Tennessee. The man knows the SEC, and he also knows how to play the recruiting game. He’s proven his ability to develop quarterbacks and build great offenses at a dead-end spot like Starkville. Tennessee is a huge step up, even though it’s in the same conference. Still, he makes a lot of money at MSU, and is this the kind of hire you want to make without knowing if his ceiling has championship potential?

Why the Tennessee Vols might not want Dan Mullen

Will the money be there? He’s already making over $5 million in Starkville. Also, he’s already in the SEC. Would he see Knoxville as an opportunity? He’s also never won big in Starkville, though he did have MSU to No. 1 briefly when Dak Prescott was the quarterback.

 

Tennessee Vols coaching candidate Scott Frost

As Tennessee embarks on its fourth coaching search in ten years, here’s a quick look at Vols coaching candidate Scott Frost.

Scott Frost’s coaching experience (42 years old)

Elite option quarterback at Nebraska. Began playing career at Stanford; also played in NFL. College assistant at Nebraska, Kansas State, Northern Iowa and offensive coordinator for national runner up Oregon. Assistant 2002-15. Head coach at Central Florida the past two seasons.

GRT college football coach taxonomy: Up and Comer.

Why the Tennessee Vols might want Scott Frost

His coaching pedigree is as good as any coach’s around, from Bill Walsh to Tom Osbourne to Mike Tomlin to Chip Kelly. He took an 0-12 Knights team to a bowl game their first year and an undefeated record so far this year. He’s a rising star and an alpha personality the fan base could get behind. The fans may not love him at first because he doesn’t have a huge body of work. He’s got an explosive offense with ties all over the country. Beyond Gruden, he’s the favorite option of all three Gameday on Rocky Top authors. You need upside when the pool of coaches isn’t deep. He’s got the highest of them all.

Why the Tennessee Vols might not want Scott Frost

It doesn’t matter about UCF. You can outbid the Knights, but if they remain undefeated, there’s no way you can publicly lure him until after the early signing period. Also, with his alma mater maybe coming open, would he go back to Lincoln? Would he hold out for a Florida school with the Gators actively searching and the Seminoles reeling?

Tennessee Vols coaching candidate Jon Gruden

As Tennessee embarks on its fourth coaching search in ten years, here’s a quick look at Vols coaching candidate Jon Gruden, the white whale on Rocky Top.

Jon Gruden’s coaching experience (54 years old)

Vols graduate assistant, 1986-87. College assistant at Southeast Missouri State and Pacific 1988-89. NFL assistant 1990-97, including offensive coordinator at Philadelphia. NFL head coach 1998-2008 at Oakland and Tampa Bay.

GRT college football coach taxonomy: Pro, On Hiatus.

Why the Tennessee Vols might want Jon Gruden

Gruden is the Holy Gru-l of Tennessee coaching searches. His name has come up in each of the past two searches that yielded Derek Dooley and Butch Jones. He’s basically the guy who could completely unify the fan base. He is a former graduate assistant at UT under Johnny Majors, his wife is a former Tennessee cheerleader, his son is a UT student, he owns land in Jefferson County. HIS WIFE WANTS TO BE CLOSE TO FAMILY! HE LOVES THE VOLS! [By now, you’ve heard it all]. He’d give Tennessee that instant-credibility hire that could make the Vols a national story again. In a good way.

Why the Tennessee Vols might not want Jon Gruden

Of course, UT would love to have the Super Bowl winning head coach and current Monday Night Football analyst, but how serious is he about coaching? He makes a ton of money as one of ESPN’s leading analysts, and he has a cushy, stress-free job. He doesn’t know anything about coaching in college, recruiting, or compliance, so he’d have to beef up his support staff in those areas. Plus, he really loves Tennessee. Would he want to take the chance of the highs and lows of rebuilding UT to a powerhouse? That’s a major question.

Taxonomy of college football coaches: Gurus, Champions, Contenders, and Up-and-Comers

So, it’s official. Butch Jones is fired, and the Tennessee Volunteers are looking for a new head football coach. We’ve already talked about what a good coaching resume looks like, and we’ll be publishing our list of candidates and their profiles in the next couple of hours. Before that, though, I thought it would be worthwhile to develop a taxonomy of college football coaches, a sort of food chain, if you will, as it should help us in evaluating candidates.

There are a lot of ways to do this, but what we’ve ended up with a four levels of “Proven Winners,” Up and Comers, Great Coordinators, Gurus, and On Hiatus. The categories are not mutually exclusive; for instance, a Guru is probably also in one of the Proven Winner categories. Otherwise, he wouldn’t be much of a guru, would he? And coaches in all categories except those that are On Hiatus would need to be headhunted from their current job. Note, too, that listing someone as an example in a category isn’t meant to imply that they’re available, desired, or obtainable by Tennessee.

The Proven Winner, Level One – National Champion

This is a head coach who’s regularly winning at the highest level and has recently won a national championship (or a bunch of them).

Examples: Nick Saban, Dabo Swinney, Urban Meyer. Maybe Jimbo Fisher and Les Miles, although they each have a recency problem.

The Proven Winner, Level Two – Major Conference Champion

This is a head coach who’s regularly winning at the highest level, but hasn’t quite gotten to the pinnacle with a national championship yet. He’s regularly winning Power 5 conference championships. “Regularly” might be a bit strong; “recently” might be enough.

Examples: Bob Stoops, Gary Patterson, James Franklin, Mark Dantonio, Chris Petersen, David Shaw, Chip Kelly.

The Proven Winner, Level Three – Major Conference Contender

This is a head coach who’s regularly competing for championships in a Power 5 conference, but not regularly (or recently) winning them.

Examples: Justin Fuente, Mike Gundy, Gus Malzahn, Jim Harbaugh, Bobby Petrino, Charlie Strong, Paul Chryst, and Jim McElwain (maybe?). Also, Bret Bielema, who won championships in the Big 10, but he has a Peter Principle issue to overcome, not having duplicated his Big 10 success in the SEC.

The Proven Winner, Level Four – Mid-Major Champion

This is a head coach with a track record of winning non-Power 5 conferences.

Examples: Tom Herman, Scott Satterfield, Matt Campbell, Jeff Brohm, Willie Taggart, Lane Kiffin, Matt Rhule, P.J. Fleck, Brian Harsin, Blake Anderson, Butch Jones.

Up and comer

This is a head coach who is beginning to make a name for himself but doesn’t yet have a record of sustained success.

Examples: Kirby Smart, Lincoln Riley, Scott Frost, Mike Norvell, Phillip Montgomery, Jason Candle.

Great coordinators

This is a coach who is currently serving as an offensive or defensive coordinator for a proven winner at a major program.

Examples: John Chavis, Jeremy Pruitt, Brent Venables, Lane Kiffin, Jim Moorhead, Mike Bobo, Chad Morris, Dave Aranda, Todd Grantham.

Gurus

These are guys who are known as innovators in their respective areas. They are likely also in one of the higher-level Proven Winner categories, but also may not have had the opportunity at a major program yet.

Examples: Steve Spurrier, Urban Meyer, Chip Kelly, Mike Leach, Gary Patterson, Nick Saban, David Cutcliffe, Bobby Petrino, Lane Kiffin.

Pros

These are guys whose primary experience has been in the NFL ranks. Translation to college is iffy.

Examples: Jon Gruden, Jim Bob Cooter, Lovie Smith, Bobby Petrino.

On Hiatus

These are guys who are either between coaching jobs or presumably out to pasture. They probably don’t have buyouts.

Examples: Chip Kelly, Les Miles, Bob Stoops, Phillip Fulmer, Jon Gruden.

Butch Jones OUT as Tennessee’s Head Coach

The Knoxville nightmare is over.

Following Missouri’s 50-17 domination of Tennessee on Saturday night, athletic director John Currie has fired fifth-year head coach Butch Jones, according to multiple reports. FOXSports’ Bruce Feldman was the first to report Jones notified his staff this morning.

The ouster is effective immediately, and defensive line coach and associate head coach Brady Hoke will assume coaching responsibilities for the remainder of this woeful season.

The Vols are 0-6 in the SEC with games remaining against LSU and Vanderbilt at Neyland Stadium. After consecutive nine-win seasons under Jones, 2017 has been forgettable as UT has fallen apart. It’s arguable that this is worse than at any time during the Derek Dooley era.

What’s even more frustrating is lack of competitiveness. When you couple that to all the infighting, the embarrassment of Jones’ public comments, a losing streak against every single SEC program currently and the lack of player development, it was a no-brainer to part ways with Jones.

Controversies such as the Brett Kendrick concussion fiasco and Vol For Life coordinator Antone Davis’ not-so-quiet departure only contributed to the dysfunction in the final few weeks.

When asked by VolQuest.com’s Jesse Simonton on Saturday night if he still believed he had the full support of Currie, Jones quipped that at least Simonton was consistent in his questioning before his answer:

“The message is the same. We have two games left,” he said.

“It’s all about this football team and how we finish. We work exceptionally hard every single day. It’s very disappointing when you invest the way you invest each and every day to win on Saturdays.

“That’s what it’s all about. It’s about these seniors. It’s about these players. It ain’t about the coach. It ain’t about nothing but nothing else. It’s about our players and it’s about our seniors. Again, how do we finish? We have a great challenge Saturday night in Neyland against LSU. What a great opportunity.”

Jones was 34-27 in five seasons at Tennessee, but he finished 1-4 against Florida, despite being arguably better than the Gators in at least four of those years. He never sniffed Alabama in a game, either. The Jones era was characterized by baffling coaching decisions [consult the “chart”, anyone?], Butchisms such as “Champions for Life” and “Five-Star Hearts” that made Tennessee a national laughingstock, and that dumb garbage can that became is “Opportunity is NowHere” moment. There were also bizarre things such as Jalen Hurd quitting in the middle of last season and Shy Tuttle mysteriously “falling on a helmet.”

His ouster was met with some vitriol from people who knew and covered him. Knoxville radio personality and former UT player Jayson Swain tweeted this:

“My 1st reaction is not happiness. My thoughts immediately go to the former staff members, assts, & former players of Butch Jones. They had their world turned upside down & careers negatively impacted by probably one of the worst Human beings I’ve encountered In a long time.”

Former UT player Andrew Butcher tweeted a scene from “Elf” with Will Ferrell waving: “BYE!”

It was a frustrating affair with the media and fans, to say the least; one that turned nasty this year.

But there also were good things. Consecutive nine-win seasons hadn’t been accomplished at Tennessee since the Phillip Fulmer era. He was excellent for the grade-point average of the student-athletes, and he consistently put together top-15 recruiting classes.

But he failed to develop those players into championship-caliber athletes. Then, when quarterback Joshua Dobbs, cornerback Cameron Sutton, running back Alvin Kamara, defensive end Derek Barnett and others left, the program fell apart on the field.

That’s ultimately led to Jones’ undoing.

When it became evident that mediocrity may be the ceiling under Jones and that the lowest-lows of 2017 could occur often, Currie had to cut bait. He did, and now, the Vols are looking for their fifth coach since 2008.

Finally, there was some recruiting fallout, as expected. Instate receiver Alontae Taylor will look around, he told Rivals.com’s Woody Wommack. He’s looking at schools such as Georgia, Georgia Tech and Wake Forest, among others. Also, receiver Shocky Jacques-Louis decommitted, and 4-star safety Trey Dean said he would “probably” decommit.

That’s not surprising; there’s always going to be recruiting fallout. But as the decommitment from 5-star offensive tackle Cade Mays proved last week, it already was falling apart. It’ll be interesting to see if and how the next coach can put together a solid class. The bottom line is that the Vols weren’t developing those players as well as they needed to with Jones, so if the ’18 class is a sacrifice, it’s a necessary one.

Keep it right here for updates, hot board candidates and columns throughout the day.

Bulldog 85 wins Week 11 of the Gameday on Rocky Top Pick ‘Em Contest

Congratulations to Bulldog 85, who went finished first with a record of 18-2 and 194 confidence points in this week’s Gameday on Rocky Top Pick ‘Em Pool. He wins a Gameday on Rocky Top t-shirt from our custom tee store, Web Community Tees.

Gameday on Rocky Top Logo Tee

Bulldog 85, watch for a message from me on how to get your tee.

Birdjam remains in the lead in the overall standings.

Here are the full results for this week:.

Rank Selection Name W-L Pts Tie Breaker Game (17-50)
1 Bulldog 85 18-2 194 23-38
2 Anaconda 17-3 192 20-36
3 ThePowerT 16-4 190 30-41
4 PrideofTheSouthlandFan 17-3 187 24-35
5 birdjam 15-5 185 23-31
6 LuckyGuess 15-5 182 24-27**
6 Knottfair 16-4 182 21-24
8 HUTCH 16-4 181 23-48**
8 GeorgeMonkey 14-6 181 27-31
8 mmb61 16-4 181 17-35
8 jfarrar90 15-5 181 17-30
8 jeremy.waldroop 13-7 181 13-31
13 Jahiegel 14-6 180 25-33**
13 spartans100 15-5 180 17-38
13 ChuckieTVol 16-4 180 20-31
13 RandyH112 15-5 180 14-35
17 Phonies 15-5 179 30-42
18 daetilus 15-5 178 23-30
19 edgarmsmith 16-4 177 12-42**
19 PAVolFan 15-5 177 21-28
19 rsbrooks25 14-6 177 27-25
22 Joel @ GRT 15-5 174 24-33**
22 Harley 17-3 174 27-24
22 BZACHARY 16-4 174 0-0
25 joeb_1 14-6 173 27-30**
25 Raven17 15-5 173 28-24
27 C_hawkfan 14-6 172 30-36
28 mmmjtx 15-5 169 10-21**
28 Drew 17-3 169 0-0
30 boro wvvol 15-5 168 10-35**
30 mariettavol 15-5 168 35-34
30 Displaced_Vol_Fan 13-7 168 31-29
30 crafdog 15-5 168 31-27
34 UNDirish60 14-6 167 27-31
35 Jaywine 16-4 165 20-34**
35 TNann 16-4 165 24-28
37 ctull 15-5 164 13-34**
37 CajunVol 15-5 164 0-0
39 Volfan2002 8-Dec 163 21-31**
39 DinnerJacket 15-5 163 32-24
39 tpi 15-5 163 0-0
42 tdrb42 15-5 158 0-0
43 patmd 16-4 157 13-31**
43 Dylan pickle 14-6 157 14-28
45 Gman15 13-7 153 16-35
46 ed75 16-4 152 17-52**
46 vols95 13-7 152 30-28
46 Techboy 16-4 152 0-0
49 ddayvolsfan 15-5 150 24-35**
49 alanmar 15-5 150 24-34
51 bking 14-6 149 27-17
52 PensacolaVolFan 15-5 148 35-24
53 ga26engr 8-Dec 138 24-32
54 Timbuktu126 14-6 134 18-15
55 rollervol 8-Dec 132 17-16
56 the-albatross 9-Nov 128 27-26
57 ltvol99 9-Nov 121 29-28
58 Jrstep 8-Dec 120 11-24
59 1hoss2 0-20 0 0-0**

 

And here are the current overall standings after Week 8:

Rank Selection Name W-L Pts
1 birdjam 174-46 1986
2 joeb_1 167-53 1965
3 Phonies 173-47 1959
4 Knottfair 168-52 1950
5 UNDirish60 170-50 1948
5 PAVolFan 168-52 1948
7 GeorgeMonkey 163-57 1945
8 Volfan2002 166-54 1943
9 jfarrar90 169-51 1939
10 C_hawkfan 168-52 1934
10 spartans100 174-46 1934
12 ChuckieTVol 167-53 1933
13 Jahiegel 167-53 1932
14 PrideofTheSouthlandFan 173-47 1931
15 Displaced_Vol_Fan 160-60 1922
16 Anaconda 156-64 1916
17 mariettavol 167-53 1897
18 rsbrooks25 169-51 1890
19 mmmjtx 170-50 1889
20 BZACHARY 163-57 1887
21 ThePowerT 155-65 1877
22 Joel @ GRT 170-50 1869
23 Raven17 159-61 1866
24 mmb61 162-58 1847
25 edgarmsmith 165-55 1840
26 CajunVol 165-55 1798
27 LuckyGuess 151-69 1796
28 vols95 154-66 1792
29 DinnerJacket 160-60 1785
30 alanmar 169-51 1781
31 tpi 167-53 1778
32 ctull 158-62 1764
33 Gman15 156-64 1748
34 boro wvvol 147-73 1728
35 jeremy.waldroop 150-70 1698
36 daetilus 141-79 1662
37 TNann 158-62 1637
38 ltvol99 135-85 1613
39 ga26engr 149-71 1607
40 tdrb42 141-79 1603
41 crafdog 153-67 1594
42 HUTCH 148-72 1590
43 Bulldog 85 142-78 1581
44 waltsspac 141-79 1568
44 chuckiepoo 125-95 1568
46 ddayvolsfan 145-75 1564
47 bking 137-83 1560
48 Drew 133-87 1539
49 patmd 149-71 1522
50 Sam 128-92 1482
51 Jrstep 137-83 1476
52 Rossboro 115-105 1473
53 1hoss2 131-89 1440
54 rollervol 133-87 1427
55 OriginalVol1814 107-113 1422
56 rockhopper78 107-113 1413
57 ed75 114-106 1398
58 Techboy 131-89 1380
59 BlountVols 106-114 1377
60 Timbuktu126 127-93 1348
61 IBleedVolOrange 116-104 1305
62 RandyH112 125-95 1302
63 Jaywine 108-112 1299
64 VillaVol 89-131 1295
65 Harley 125-95 1293
66 PensacolaVolFan 125-95 1275
67 the-albatross 104-116 1222
68 Dylan pickle 116-104 1209
69 dgibbs 77-143 1182
70 VandyVol 88-132 1176
71 RichVols 80-140 1175
72 utkjmitch 76-144 1151
72 mobilevol 86-134 1151
74 Volboy 73-147 1124
75 jstorie1 72-148 1107
76 TennVol95 in 3D! 71-149 1074
77 waitwhereami 61-159 1069
78 wreckvol 60-160 1061
79 KeepsCornInAJar 61-159 1059
80 aquasox 72-148 1027
81 Will Shelton 52-168 1024
82 biologydropout 47-173 1018
83 SouthernDCist 57-163 1002
84 EVOL 42-178 998
85 MeytonPanning 55-165 997
86 rudydog 56-164 992
87 kmchugh 31-189 935
88 BritishVol 39-181 934
89 CNMcCreary 50-170 920
90 rockytopinky 56-164 900
91 jobliner 38-182 895
92 sncdaisy 40-180 886
93 over754ut 29-191 864
94 DCVFL 21-199 809
95 memphispete 18-202 800
96 901Vol 18-202 797
97 T dog 0-220 731
97 wedflatrock 0-220 731
99 The Alyas Greys 15-205 678
100 PaVol 5-215 609

Gameday on Rocky Top W11 Guessing Game Results: the rich get richer

Sam extends his lead in the Gameday on Rocky Top Guessing Game this week, thanks in part to stealing all of the mushrooms. Play by play below.

Top 10 as of the end of last week

Sam 74
Marietta Vol 69
Josh Farrar 66
Raven17 66
Fatso 64
Dave Strunk 60
Daetilus 59
Joel Hollingsworth 57
Evan 54
RandyH 54

 

Round 1

Q: Tennessee’s pass defense has been good so far this season, but they’re going up against the best passing offense they’ve seen so far this year. How many passing yards do they give up this week? (10-20 points)

A: 200-299 (10 points) (226)

Only one poor soul gets this wrong. Everybody else gets 5 points.

Mushrooms: Evan and RandyH (the aforementioned poor soul)

Bananas: TennVol95 and Harley

Blue shells and bolts: Bulldog 85 draws a thunderbolt and claims the next question all to himself.

Top 10 after Round 1:

Sam 84
Marietta Vol 79
Raven17 76
Fatso 74
Dave Strunk 70
Daetilus 69
Evan 69
Joel Hollingsworth 67
Josh Farrar 66
cscott95 62

 

Round 2

Q: Tennessee’s offense is struggling, but they’re going up against the worst scoring defense they’ve seen all season. How many points do the Vols score against Missouri? (10-20 points)

A: Under 20 (20 points) (17)

Three players would have raced ahead with 20 points for this answer, including Mr. Poor Soul for Week 11, except that they, along with everyone else, are tiny and slow due to Bulldog 85’s thunderbolt. And he didn’t get the question right, so everybody loses.

Mushrooms: Sam (who’s in first and keeps getting richer) and Displaced_Vol_Fan.

Bananas: Harley and me

Blue shells and bolts: None

Top 10 after Round 2:

Sam 89
Marietta Vol 79
Raven17 76
Fatso 74
Dave Strunk 70
Daetilus 69
Evan 69
Josh Farrar 66
Joel Hollingsworth 62
cscott95 62

 

Round 3

Q: Missouri has a havoc-wreaking defense, and Tennessee’s offensive line is working with backups of backups. How many sacks does Tennessee give up? (10-20 points)

A: 5 – 6 (10 points) (5)

Four players get this right and get five points for it.

Mushrooms: Sam (!) and Displaced_Vol_Fan

Bananas: Evan and Displaced_Vol_Fan

Blue shells and bolts: LTVol99 draws a thunderbolt and claims the next question all to himself.

Top 10 after Round 3:

Sam 94
Fatso 84
Marietta Vol 79
Raven17 76
cscott95 72
Dave Strunk 70
Daetilus 69
Josh Farrar 66
MitchellK 66
Evan 64

 

Full table

Player Prior Prior Specials R1 R1 Sub R1 Specials R1 Total R2 R2 Sub R2 Specials R2 Total R3 R3 Sub R3 Specials R3 Total
Sam 74 10 84 84 84 5 89 89 5 94
Fatso 64 10 74 74 74 74 10 84 84
Marietta Vol 69 10 79 79 79 79 79 79
Raven17 66 10 76 76 76 76 76 76
cscott95 52 10 62 62 62 62 10 72 72
Dave Strunk 60 10 70 70 70 70 70 70
Daetilus 59 10 69 69 69 69 69 69
Josh Farrar 66 66 66 66
MitchellK 46 10 56 56 56 56 10 66 66
Evan 54 10 64 5 69 69 69 69 -5 64
Joel Hollingsworth 57 10 67 67 67 -5 62 62 62
LTVol99 41 10 51 51 51 51 10 61 BOLT 61
RandyH 54 54 5 59 59 59 59 59
TennVol95 53 10 63 -5 58 58 58 58 58
Harley 47 10 57 -5 52 52 -5 47 47 47
Jayyyy 44 44 44 44
PaVol 32 32 32 32
Will Shelton 31 31 31 31
Oleg Zeltser 28 28 28 28
Phil 28 28 28 28
Displaced_Vol_Fan 12 10 22 22 22 5 27 27 0 27
Alyas Grey 26 26 26 26
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Missouri Tigers 50, Tennessee Vols 17: Sigh

Sigh.

The Tennessee Volunteers fell to 4-6 overall and winless in the conference with a numbing 50-17 loss to the Missouri Tigers tonight in Columbia, Missouri. A more highly-touted roster kept it close in the first half, tying the game at 17 with just over a minute to play before halftime, but was utterly overwhelmed on both sides of the ball after that.

For a while, it seemed like maybe, just maybe, the Vols were going to be able to scrape together some magic. True freshman quarterback Will McBride, in his first start, surprisingly provided a bit of a missing element for the offense, scrambling several times for a much-needed first down, and he finished the game with 63 rushing yards despite multiple sacks that count against that total. And the defense seemed content to give up some rushing yards as a trade off for selling out to stop the vaunted Missouri passing attack. And it worked to keep the game tied. For a while.

But then everything fell apart again. Missouri started hitting long passes to complement their long rushing plays, and the Vols offense just shut down. John Kelly got the equivalent of a technical foul in basketball for saying something presumably unfriendly to an official. On a team with Kelly and Ty Chandler, McBride and his 63 yards led the team in rushing. He was sacked five times. He threw two interceptions. He fumbled once. Or twice. I’ve forgotten.

And he was the best player on the team.

Sigh.

The game got so out of hand that the TV commentators were obviously reaching for things to talk about to fill the fourth quarter of air time. And of course, they devoted a lot of that time to discussing Butch Jones’ job security and openly suggesting that the administration not delay due to the early signing period this year. When that got them only halfway through the fourth, they moved on to talking about the teams competing for the four spots in the College Football Playoff.

Good times for Vols fans.

Who knows when we’ll hear something definitive about the future of the coaching staff. There’s a new rumor on Twitter every five minutes or so if you enjoy being led around by your nose. I figure we’ll know when we know.

In the meantime, the team has two more games, and they need both of them for bowl eligibility and at least one of them to avoid the program’s first-ever eight-loss season. If you believe the odds, the margin will only get thinner next week after a loss to LSU, and the final game of the season against Vandy will be the last chance to avoid a historical low.

Sigh.