Vols to get instant help at cornerback from graduate transfer Shaq Wiggins

The Tennessee Vols just got great news in the form of former Louisville cornerback Shaq Wiggins announcing that he is coming to Tennessee as a graduate transfer and will be available to play immediately this fall. Wiggins earned an All-ACC honorable mention in 2015, a season in which he started all 13 games and returned two interceptions for 52 yards. He also had 13 passes defended and 11 pass breakups.

Last season, Wiggins played in only eight games and started one due to injuries, and he sat out the 2014 season after transferring to Louisville from Georgia when former Bulldogs defensive coordinator Todd Grantham left for the Cardinals. Wiggins started eight games as a freshman in Athens.

A former Under Armour All-American in high school, Wiggins looks to mix things up in the secondary for the Vols this fall camp. He’ll compete with Emmanuel Moseley, Justin Martin, and the other cornerbacks on the roster for a starting spot.

Gameday Today: Vols in the NFL Draft, Orange and White Game debriefings, and recruiting offers

NFL Draft

Will at Rocky Top Talk is celebrating Derek Barnett by reliving some of his best moments at Tennessee. Barnett didn’t just rack up the sack totals; he picked it up at the right time.
 
The Josh Dobbs bandwagon is getting quite cozy with another ESPN analyst suddenly realizing that Dobbs is better than everybody thinks. What’s fueling the bandwagon? Work ethic, attitude, and intelligence, says Mel Kiper. I don’t know, maybe he’s just now seeing that NCAA Student Athlete PSA.
 
And don’t forget Josh Malone, who Kiper says could go in the third round, which would be good news to his grandma, who told me in the Ingles parking lot the other day that she’d wanted him to stay in school. Oh, but the brain lasts longer than the body. 
 
Can you remember the last Vol who was taken in the NFL Draft? Me, neither. Answer at the bottom of the post.

Football

The Orange and White Game debriefing is nearly complete. So what have we learned?
 
The running back depth is a serious issue that I will not joke about until the new recruits arrive on campus this summer.
 
Defensive back Justin Martin is a new man.
 
And a whole bunch of guys got a whole bunch of reps due to a whole bunch of injuries, including receiver Marquez Callaway, who apparently had more reps than anyone else on the team during spring.

Recruiting

Tennessee’s made a bunch of offers to 2019 prospects in the wake of the Orange and White Game, including one each to top-50 wide receivers Arjei Henderson and Trejan Bridges and one to defensive tackle DeWayne Carter.
 

By my count, that’s 21 offers already by Tennessee, all spent on two guys. I don’t know who the recruiting coordinator over there is, but he sounds like a spendthrift. 
 

Answer to the NFL Draft question

Yeah, I couldn’t remember the last Vol drafted, either. It was apparently Daniel McCullers.

Tennessee Stays Hot on Recruiting Trail With Three More Commits

Tennessee met one of its biggest needs in the 2018 recruiting class with Friday’s pledge of Florida running back Jashaun Corbin. It wound up just the beginning to an Orange & White Game weekend.

A lot of rain couldn’t dampen how hot the Volunteers were on the recruiting trail as UT added three more commitments the past two days, and there are even a few more who could pop soon. Though there were no huge-name pledges out of the bunch, all three are vital to the Vols’ class and have high upsides.

Corbin remains the highlight, but the other three pledges keep UT moving along in this year’s class and getting off to a great start in the 2019 haul, too. The most high-profile of the pledges came from 3-star quarterback Michael Penix Jr. of Tampa Bay Tech. The 6’3″, 182-pound southpaw signal-caller has liked the Vols for a long time, but he committed on Saturday, choosing UT over offers from Oregon, Arizona, Rutgers, South Florida, Florida Atlantic and others.

Though Penix doesn’t have the greatest offer sheet in the world, the Vols identified him early in the process and wanted him for a long time. In a year where they want to take two signal-callers, it was important to get one early, and Penix looks like he has the ability and the upside to come in and compete. He immediately left Knoxville and participated in a camp in Washington D.C., where 247Sports writer Steve Wiltfong said he was a “steady” performer during Elite 11 drills.

Tennessee also hosted top QB target Adrian Martinez, who told GoVols247’s Ryan Callahan he had a “really good visit” this weekend and had a decision to make between UT and the Cal Bears, where he’s been committed for the past five months. The Vols would love for Martinez to be their second QB commit in this class to go along with Penix.

The biggest surprise pledge of the weekend came from fast, dynamic receiver Jatavious Harris of Milledgeville, Georgia, who had South Carolina as his leader prior to his weekend visit to Knoxville. The 6’2″, 182-pound pass-catcher vibed well with UT receivers coach Kevin Beard and pledged on Sunday, giving Tennessee its second commitment from a receiver in this class. Harris joins Manchester, Tennessee, receiver Alontae Taylor, and the two already have quite a rapport on social media. Harris has great size and is quick in the open field, as his HUDL video shows.

Harris had offers from the Gamecocks, Florida, Louisville, Kentucky, Miami, Michigan State, Mississippi State, Oklahoma State and others.

He and Taylor have been chirping all weekend about other possible commitments, and some names that are being thrown around as possibilities are Alabama linebacker Jacquez Jones and maybe a 2019 commit or two.

One player in next year’s class who made his verbal pledge is Chattanooga athlete Cameron Wynn, who may well be the fastest player in the state, regardless of class. He plays both offense and defense for Notre Dame High School, and though he played quarterback last year, the Vols are recruiting him to play receiver. He joins soft commitments Kendrell Scurry and TJ Sheffield as UT pledges in that class. All are in-state receivers. All are also early 4-star recruits on 247Sports.

Tennessee has made a habit in recent years of loading up on prospects early and then over-recruiting them if necessary. None of these players on the surface look like candidates for that; they’re all quality players who a lot of teams wanted.

Orange & White Game Becomes Q-School

With Joshua Dobbs heading to the NFL after leading a prolific offense the past couple of years for Tennessee, it’s only natural to want things to stay fairly close to the same.

Why fix something that isn’t broken, after all?

That’s one of the reasons we’ve all heard so much about former stud recruit Jarrett Guarantano this spring. Fans are enamored with his dual-threat ability, live arm and New Jersey swagger. His game is a little bit Dobbs-esque, even if we don’t know how it’ll translate once the games start. The former top-ranked dual-threat quarterback in the country as a 2016 recruit has a lot to offer entering his redshirt freshman year.

All that’s fine and good, but Saturday’s Orange & White Game belonged to junior Quinten Dormady.

The Boerne, Texas, signal-caller was sharp all day in a storm-shortened spring finale, completing 10-of-10 passes for 120 yards and a pair of touchdowns. The first one went to Jauan Jennings, and he followed that up with a perfect pass to the pylon to Eli Wolf on the wheel route for the final scoring strike.

It was as impressive a performance as you could want. Not only was Dormady perfect on the stat sheet, many of his passes were. As dynamic as Dobbs was with the ball in his hands throughout his career, his ball placement wasn’t always the best. On Saturday, Dormady got the ball upfield and put the ball in the ideal place for his playmakers to make the next football move.

Yes, it was only a scrimmage, but Dormady looked terrific. He even nailed the Jauan Jennings Hail Mary Challenge, which was a cool twist on the QB competition that took place, replicating the Dobbs-to-Jennings game-winning touchdown over Georgia last year.

In Guarantano’s defense, he wasn’t bad, either. Also, in an environment that was essentially two-hand touch on the quarterbacks, that’s not the best place for a runner like Guarantano to shine. His big arm was on display a couple of times, but he wasn’t as poised or confident as Dormady. To be frank, one of them looked like he’d seen game action before; the other didn’t. 

Though Dormady has only gotten in games in mop-up duty so far in his career as Dobbs’ backup, game action is important. It helps once the live bullets start flying. Once he got his chance to shine in a semi-game environment as “The Man” Saturday, he looked like he could be a big deal under center for the Vols. 

With new coordinator Larry Scott now at the helm of the offense, it’s going to change at least some. Alvin Kamara is gone, and Preston Williams is, too. Also, no matter who winds up starting for UT in 2017, he probably won’t be as dynamic as Dobbs. So, there’s nothing wrong with a fresh start. 

Dormady may not be anywhere near the runner that Dobbs or even Guarantano are, but he isn’t immobile back there. He’s athletic, and he also possesses an NFL arm. He can make all the throws, and the South Texan didn’t hang around Knoxville to watch from the sideline for another couple of years. He believes he can be the starter, and his play backed that up. He was brilliant.

Listen: One half of a scrimmage [two drives] does not a season make. This competition is nowhere near over, and UT coach Butch Jones said again Saturday there is “no timetable” for naming a starter. To anoint either guy as the winner of the competition to take the season’s first snap right now would be puzzling at best and crippling at worst. What if the other guy is frustrated and transfers? What if the team saw something different and there’s a rift much the way the Rick Clausen-Erik Ainge conundrum went back in the day?

Let them battle through the offseason, through drills, through film sessions, through the weight room and into fall camp. Heck, if you think playing both of them give you the best chance to win come September, do that, too. 

But for one day at least, this was Dormady’s team and Dormady’s show. The Vols have two very capable quarterbacks, and while the junior may be a smidge overlooked in this race because of all the hype surrounding Guarantano, he hasn’t let that phase him a bit. He made all the throws on Saturday, and he has the kind of arm talent that can accomplish that consistently. This type of showing can give him confidence he needs to head into the offseason believing this is his team. When that happens, it can elevate play.

Nobody is anointing Dormady a star or even the starter. That eye-bleeding O&W game format was so difficult to watch that it was mercifully over after a half. Seriously, why take the fun out of a game like that?? Oh well, that’s beside the point. While there wasn’t a whole lot to take away, Dormady’s performance was exciting. With the post-Dobbs era upon us and the worries and wondering about what the offense is going to be like now that such a play-making signal-caller is gone, there was hope in the form of Dormady’s strong arm and poise on Saturday.

It’s enough to make us all want to keep reading about this healthy competition all through the offseason.

How to watch Tennessee’s Orange and White Game today at 4:00

It’s Gameday. Tennessee will hold its annual Orange and White Game today at 4:00 p.m.  You can catch video coverage of the game on the SEC Network or WatchESPN, and you can listen to the Vol Network on your radio or through your computer or phone.

It’s not going to be an actual scrimmage, but more of an open practice. You will be able to see players compete in the Circle of Life drill, one-on-one situations (wide receivers vs. defensive backs, offensive linemen vs. defensive linemen), and in quarterback and kicking challenges.

It’s also Fan Appreciation Day (from 1:30 – 2:30), so you can get autographs from players and Butch Jones or pictures with Smokey and/or the Tennessee cheer and dance team.

https://twitter.com/UTCoachJones/status/855497617282936832

Jashaun Corbin Gives Tennessee a Potential Star Running Back Commit

Tennessee already sits in prime shape with a lot of its top prospects for the 2018 recruiting class, but there are few bigger needs than impact running backs.

The Vols certainly grabbed one of those on Friday afternoon on Orange & White Game eve, when Melbourne, Florida, running back Jashaun Corbin announced via Twitter that he was committing to UT.

https://twitter.com/Jashaun06/status/855552179284955140

The 6’0″, 191-pound runner from Holy Trinity Episcopal Academy is a 4-star prospect on Rivals and a 3-star prospect on 247Sports, but his ceiling is very high, as evidenced by his offer sheet. The teams that have given him offers number more than 25 and include the likes of Southern Cal, Clemson, Florida State, Florida, Michigan, Notre Dame, Miami, LSU, Oregon, South Carolina, etc. It’s basically a who’s-who of Football Bowl Subdivision powers.

Corbin just visited Knoxville this past week and raved to recruiting sites about his relationship with UT running backs coach Robert Gillespie. Also, he has developed a rapport with new offensive coordinator Larry Scott, who recruits Florida for the Vols. After totally nearly 2,000 yards as a prep junior last year, UT sold Corbin on sliding into the Alvin Kamara role.

He’s proven he can do everything, with more than 1,100 rushing yards, more than 600 receiving yards, 19 total touchdowns and the ability to produce in the return game. He has 4.43 speed, and if you don’t think he’s a legit back, check out his high school junior HUDL.

Without question, this is a player UT will have to fight to hang onto, but he’s an incredible early pickup to go along with instate offensive linemen Cade Mays and Ollie Lane, Volunteer State athlete Alontae Taylor and cornerback Shatar McClay. Corbin is the fifth overall pledge and the first for UT from out of state.

Tennessee is in need of elite runners in this year’s class. After Jalen Hurd quit the team and Alvin Kamara headed to the NFL, the Vols are left with John Kelly as the starter, and he’s entering a junior year that could be a breakout campaign. While nobody is betting on him leaping to the NFL after this year, it can’t be ruled out. The Vols have only Carlin Fils-aime behind him as a scholarship runner currently on the roster.

Though UT did well in the 2017 class recruiting running backs, it missed out on elite prospect Cam Akers, who wound up at Florida State and showed out in spring drills. Who the Vols did get is former Montgomery Bell Academy standout Ty Chandler, who should step right in and play immediately. Chandler was the nation’s No. 5 running back and had a huge offer sheet.

They also added power runner Trey Coleman and all-purpose back Timothy Jordan, and hopefully one [or both] of those guys can become quality players with some time to develop. Neither of those players will wow you with their ranking, but they’ve both got some upside as niche backs.

As for Corbin, he’s a potential game-changer, and though some services don’t have him as highly ranked as others right now, he’ll skyrocket sooner or later. That’s not lip service; he’s that good. You don’t have that kind of offer list if you’re not dynamic, and his highlight reel proves it.

Now, the Vols will turn their attention to other running back targets as they should take at least one more. The board right now is thick and talented, highlighted by guys such as instate runner Master Teague, Alabama back Tae Provens (who calls UT his leader), Lyn-J Dixon, Jamal Currie-Elliott and many more. Those are the guys you hear about the most right now, and the Vols find themselves right in the mix for all of their commitments.

It’s great having Corbin in the bag this early, too. With a big prospect list expected to head to rainy Knoxville this weekend, the Vols may not be done adding commitments. But this one started with a bang.