Tennessee vs Villanova Preview: First One’s The Hardest

The scheduling gods were kind: tomorrow you’ve got football at 7:30 PM, free and clear to watch #17 Tennessee battle #5 Villanova at the Mohegan Sun at 1:00 PM. Twenty-four hours later, it’s a shot at revenge one way or another: #6 Purdue or #18 North Carolina.

These could end up being the best teams Tennessee plays in the regular season. Nova leads the way there in the current AP poll, Purdue in the current KenPom at #4. The Vols play a host of teams just outside the KenPom Top 10 later: #12 Texas Tech, #13 Memphis, #14 Texas, plus Kentucky at #15, Florida at #19, and Alabama at #20. But when it’s all said and done, you may not get a better one-two punch than Villanova and Purdue, if that’s how it ends up going this weekend.

Tennessee’s last Top 10 win was at #6 Kentucky two years ago. The 2019 squad famously got three Top 5 wins: #1 Gonzaga, and a pair of wins over #4 Kentucky. Rick Barnes also got #4 Kentucky in year two in Knoxville, giving him four Top 5 wins in his tenure. A win tomorrow would bring him one step closer to Bruce Pearl’s seven Top 5 wins: #2 Florida in 2006, #5 Florida in 2007, #1 Memphis in 2008, #1 Kansas in 2010, #2 Kentucky in 2010, #5 Ohio State in 2010, and #3 Pittsburgh in 2011.

How comfortable will the Vols be in a shootout? Since emerging on the national stage four years ago, the Vols have played only eight games where both teams scored in the 80s in regulation, with five of them coming in 2019. Tennessee went 5-3 in those games, losing twice to Auburn plus the Sweet 16 against Purdue. But the Vols did punish Memphis and Arkansas in 2019 playing at 80 possessions.

It’s not the pace with Villanova, it’s the efficiency. The Wildcats are shooting 48.8% from the arc through the first three games, two blowouts and an overtime loss to UCLA. And it wasn’t really the offense that cost them against the Bruins: Nova shot 11-of-24 from the arc (45.8%), though only 38.6% from two. They only turned it over seven times.

But UCLA shot 46.9% from the field, 17-of-19 at the line, and was +14 on the glass. They got excellent production from their guards against Villanova’s defense, which currently checks in at 61st in KenPom. Their offense is third, so if the Vols are going to do it, it may have to be by keeping up on the offensive end.

Who will those guys be for Tennessee? Through two games, Tennessee’s leaders in shots are Santiago Vescovi and…Olivier Nkamhoua, which will come as a surprise if you didn’t catch any of the UT-Martin or ETSU games. Nkamhoua has played more minutes than anyone so far, perhaps in part due to John Fulkerson working his way in from the thumb injury. But Nkamhoua is 3-of-5 from the arc and leads the team in rebounds by a mile. This is, so far, not at all the same player you remember.

Two seasons ago, after the Vols beat Florida A&M on December 4 and Nkamhoua had 11 and 13, Rick Barnes said, “We need him, and he alone can change our team with the ability that he has if he will buy into it.” It was an eyebrow-raising comment at the time, with the 2020 Vols looking for production and soon to be without Lamonte Turner the rest of the way. His 23 minutes that day ended up being a season high; he played 21 against Wisconsin over Christmas break, then only saw more than 15 minutes two other times. Last year he only played more than 15 minutes once, and only played 19 total minutes in Tennessee’s last six games.

There’s a lot that Tennessee needs on the defensive end without Yves Pons, and if you haven’t watched us yet, you’ll notice that difference right away. But Nkamhoua is again raising eyebrows for the ways he might change what Tennessee can do on the offensive end, an unexpected bonus for a group we expected to go through Kennedy Chandler and John Fulkerson. The freshman point guard is right there, third on the team in shot attempts with 10 assists to 4 turnovers so far. Fulkerson is recovering, but two years ago Tennessee’s best basketball absolutely went through him.

These Vols are also launching 30+ threes per game, meaning there is so much newness in what we’ll witness this weekend. Will it be enough to keep up with Villanova, who’ll surely find their own success against a Tennessee defense still figuring out who’s going to protect the rim?

It’s early, but could end up being the biggest test of the regular season. 1:00 PM Saturday on, you guessed it, ESPN News.

Go Vols.

Tennessee Bowl Projections: Opportunity Abounds

Win totals are at the bottom if you want to finish the run, but Tennessee’s schedule should leave everyone somewhere between 6.8-7.0 wins. With one ranked win in hand and a pair of satisfying blowouts behind it, the Vols can get one more opportunity at a win that resonates in the postseason. And there, 7-5 can still lead to 8-5, which would be the best year one record for any coach here since Phillip Fulmer.

So first the path, then the projections:

You want as many SEC teams in the CFP/NY6 as possible. The working assumption here is Georgia and Alabama are in there somewhere, and Ole Miss can be too if they win out. Those three in the CFP/NY6 should leave Texas A&M in the Citrus Bowl if the Aggies beat LSU to finish. Little has been clean this year other than Georgia at the top, but that’s the simplest version to get us to the group of six, where the Vols should find themselves.

That, of course, is the Outback, Gator, Music City, Belk/Mayo, Liberty, and Texas Bowls. Among those six, if the above scenario holds, you’ll have some combination of:

  • Arkansas (7-3, at Alabama, vs Missouri)
  • Kentucky (7-3, New Mexico State, at Louisville)
  • Mississippi State (6-4, Tennessee State, Ole Miss)
  • Auburn (6-4, at South Carolina, Alabama)
  • Tennessee (5-5, South Alabama, Vanderbilt)
  • Florida (5-5, at Missouri, Florida State)
  • Missouri (5-5, Florida, at Arkansas)
  • South Carolina (5-5, Auburn, Clemson)
  • LSU (4-6, LA Monroe, Texas A&M)

So there’s still a bit of work to do here, including, of course, Tennessee finishing strong. Outcomes of particular importance here include Alabama winning out to stay in the CFP/NY6, Ole Miss winning the Egg Bowl for the same reason, and any additional losses for teams with a chance to finish better than 7-5 in that group.

The line is that the league office works with the schools and the bowls to make “assignments” for those six bowls. It doesn’t always go the way you think – see Tennessee’s pair of assignments to the Gator Bowl at 6-6, to our benefit – but the Vols should be well positioned if they finish at 7-5.

Could Tennessee get as high as the Outback Bowl, the most prestigious of that group? You’d need some particular madness, like Arkansas losing out and Louisville over Kentucky. But as it’s not impossible, we’ve included all six bowls in the grid below. Just keep in mind that no one actually doing projections is sending the Vols to Tampa. A couple send the Vols to Jacksonville, but most like Nashville or Charlotte. The Belk/Mayo Bowl is particularly interesting because the Vols may be “competing” with a bunch of teams from the SEC West, so geography may send Tennessee to North Carolina.

Here’s the list of potential opponents in these six bowls:

OutbackGatorMusic CityMayoLibertyTexas
ESPN BonaguraWiscNC StatePenn StMiamiKansas StIowa St
ESPN SchlabachIowaClemsonMinnUNCKansas StIowa St
McMurphyPenn StClemsonMinnUNCTexas TechIowa St
CBSWiscUNCPenn StNC StateWest VAKansas St
247 SportsIowaPittsburghWiscVA TechWest VAKansas St
AthlonWiscClemsonMinnNC StateWest VAKansas St
College Football NewsIowaClemsonMinnUNCWest VAIowa St

(If the chart looks weird on your phone, try landscape)

There’s a lot left to figure out. But chances are better than not that Tennessee is going to play someone on this list.

And if the Vols find themselves in Tampa, Jacksonville, Nashville, or Charlotte, there are plenty of enticing matchups. Anything in the Outback Bowl would be a win. Nashville is its own bonus, but the chance to play Penn State or Wisconsin could be a definite additional step for the program to end year one. Clemson remains the favorite among fans I’m sure, but an Auburn/Clemson matchup might be too much for Jacksonville to pass up if they have a say in it. But a shot at Miami or North Carolina in Charlotte would also stir interest among Tennessee fans.

At this point, what you want is opportunity. And there’s plenty still out there if the Vols handle their own business the next two weeks.

Tennessee vs Georgia Preview: Somebody’s Going to Have Fun

So, how do we win this thing?

The question itself is already a bit of a win. The last three times we did this against #1, it was Bama in 2017-19. And the Vols were +36.5, +29.5, and +34.5. I can live with +20.5 this week. Our community gives the Vols a 13.7% chance of victory in expected win totals, doubling up the 6.7% we gave the Vols in Tuscaloosa this year.

And I can live with Georgia in mid-November, though with expansion I’m not sure how much longer any of us are living with anything. Tennessee faced a front-loaded schedule for almost 30 years in the SEC East. Now, in better years you’ve still got a chance to win the East if you can pull the upset. And this year – which qualifies as a better year compared to where we’ve been, and where we thought we might continue to hang out – it’s all opportunity. Win, and you’ve scored one of the program’s biggest victories in 15 years. And lose – even lose badly – and you’ve done so to #1, and we already know the why. There is no outcome here – including victory! – where Tennessee doesn’t need to recruit.

Georgia’s defense is the best in the nation, with room for improvement in the annals of history:

You’ll note the Vols are +14 in SP+ on Saturday. Come within 16 of these guys – two possessions – and you’ve done better than anyone since Clemson in the 10-3 opener. Score 14 points on them, and you’ve done better than anyone all year.

The two best defenses the Vols have faced in the last three coaching staffs are the 2016-17 Crimson Tide. The 2017 edition shut out the Vol offense – shout out to Daniel Bituli – but that offense wasn’t much to write home about. However, the 2016 version snuffed out Dobbs, Kamara, etc. to the tune of 163 yards on 63 plays. You’ll recall the week before, they had 684 yards on 99 plays at Texas A&M.

Hopefully, that’s a meaningless comparison. But we have seen it before: no matter how we’ll you’re playing or will play on offense, an elite defense can still shut it down.

Can the reverse be true?

Heupel and these guys have done a tremendous job having the Vols in every one of these games deep into the second half. It’s where we hoped the program would find itself last season, in Pruitt’s year three. I don’t know if it’s fair to expect that against Georgia – I honestly don’t know what to expect – but whether it shows up or not, Heupel and these guys have earned our trust in having his team ready to go. Obviously, this is especially true on offense. On defense? Before last week, I think we all would’ve been intrigued to see these guys go after Stetson Bennett and see what happened. There’s obviously less excitement around that after the Kentucky game, but on the whole, I’m still intrigued to see if that side of the ball can make a dent.

There’s a lot of guesswork and a few common assumptions when you’re playing number one – win turnovers, hidden points, etc. – but to me, one thing jumps off the page.

This Tennessee team is no stranger to a wide gap between outcomes on a given play. The most obvious one is the difference between the offense and defense on third down: 27th nationally at 45.38% on offense, 126th nationally at 48.39% on defense.

But an even bigger gap in potential outcomes exists when Tennessee drops back to pass.

The Vols and Louisville are tied for the national lead with four 70+ yard pass plays. We’re 16th in 30+ yard pass plays. And that’s all on just 239 passing attempts this season, 107th nationally. Among teams throwing it 25+ times per game, the Vols are eighth nationally in yards per attempt.

And Hendon Hooker has added 458 yards on the ground, going for 60+ in four different games this year.

There is so much good that happens when Tennessee drops back to pass. It’s amazing the Vols are getting all that done while also taking a sack on 13.03% of their dropbacks. That’s 126th nationally via Team Rankings.

Just as the explosive plays look even better when you consider how few times we actually throw it, the sacks look even worse. It also feels like we’re living on borrowed time in the turnover battle, where Tennessee – currently +5 in SEC play – has a chance to finish in the black there for the first time since Lane Kiffin.

Georgia is ninth nationally in sack percentage, getting the opposing quarterback 9.73% of the time. If there’s any benefit here besides having all our guys healthy, it’s that we’ve already played Alabama. Not that Bama was so great at getting Hooker on the ground, but that it’s hard to simulate going against that kind of talent. We saw Josh Heupel repeatedly run it on third-and-short and get buried every time against those guys. You just have to learn and adjust.

Will the Vols make any adjustment to protect Hooker, the ball, etc. against Georgia? Or is this just part of who we are this year: when Tennessee drops back to pass, something incredibly exciting is going to happen one way or another.

Of course, the biggest hope this week:

Truly, we haven’t been able to simulate any of this. We’re still learning how to watch football this way. We didn’t expect to be this competitive, with everyone. We don’t know how that’ll look against Georgia’s defense. Perhaps they’re not sure exactly how that’ll look against our offense. And we head into a date with the number one team in the nation feeling good about ourselves for the long haul.

What’ll happen Saturday?

Probably something exciting, one way or another.

Go Vols.

Expected Win Total Machine – #1 Georgia Week

So, you’re going to project the Vols to finish with right at seven wins this week. The math involved is if you give Tennessee enough of a chance against Georgia to counterbalance whatever chance you give South Alabama and Vanderbilt against Tennessee. But it’s a pretty safe bet to assume seven.

The interesting question here is just how much of a chance you do give the Vols on Saturday. In Tuscaloosa, that number was 6.7%. Tennessee was a 24.5 point underdog at the end of the week; the Vols are around 20.5 on this Tuesday morning.

We’re no stranger to playing the number one team in the land, having done it against Alabama seven of the last 13 seasons. Since beating Bo Jackson and #1 Auburn in 1985, the Vols have faced the top team a dozen times overall:

  • 1990 Notre Dame (L 34-29)
  • 1994 Florida (L 31-0)
  • 2002 Miami (L 26-3)
  • 2009 Florida (L 33-23)
  • 2009 Alabama (L 12-10)
  • 2011 LSU (L 38-7)
  • 2012 Alabama (L 44-13)
  • 2013 Alabama (L 45-10)
  • 2016 Alabama (L 49-10)
  • 2017 Alabama (L 45-7)
  • 2018 Alabama (L 58-21)
  • 2019 Alabama (L 35-13)

In that span, Tennessee has four wins over #2 (1985 Miami, 1998 Florida, 1998 Florida State, 2001 Florida), got #3 Georgia in 2004, and last beat a Top 5 team in The Rally at Death Valley over #4 LSU the following year.

How much of a chance do we give these Vols compared to any of those? It’s obviously less than anything from Phillip Fulmer’s tenure. But it’s probably more than most of that run against Alabama. It’s enough to be curious, just to see what happens…and this year, this week? That’s good enough for me.

Episode 181 – Vols beat ranked Kentucky and we’re looking for a new theme song

  • Breaking down the big road win against a ranked Kentucky team.
  • Peeking in on the GRT Fun Office Pool standings.
  • Just how good are these Vols?
  • So you’re saying there’s a chance against Georgia? (Uh, not really.)
  • Checking in on Vols hoops as the (real) season is about to tip off.
  • Soliciting ideas for a new theme song. Anything by John Mayer has already been ruled out.

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Where Credit is Due on Defense

Last night’s win still feels a bit like a relief. It’s unfair in some ways: any win over a ranked team still falls in the celebration category for Tennessee. You have to go back 15 years to find the Vols beating a Top 20 foe on the road (Georgia 2006, which remains Tennessee’s last Top 10 win anywhere). It qualifies as a signature win in year one. And while I enjoy this rivalry quite a bit, you don’t want to downgrade beating Kentucky just because they’re Kentucky. Credit Mark Stoops and those guys for building something worth celebrating when you beat them.

I think most of this is the way Tennessee jumped UK 14-7 and was ready to extend the lead before the fumbled exchange. Tennessee gained 189 yards on its first six snaps. It’s hard to not get a bit downhill from there. But the unstoppable feeling of the Vol offense combined with the uncomfortable feeling of Kentucky getting every third down? It made the game feel less back-and-forth and more, “Why aren’t we putting these guys away?”

So sure: Tennessee’s defense is now 126th in third down conversions allowed at 48.39%. The Vols have given up points on 33 of 35 red zone trips (94.29%, 124th) and a touchdown on 28 of those (80%, 127th). But again, it’s not complicated to see what Tim Banks’ group is going for.

Tennessee’s defense has faced 716 snaps, the most for any team playing nine games and no overtimes so far this year. They’ve given up 148 plays of 10+ yards, 114th nationally.

But they’ve only given up six plays of 40+ yards, 23rd nationally. Bend, don’t break, rinse, repeat.

They’re disruptive up front, second in the country in tackles for loss with 8.11. And sure, some of that is the enormous snap count. But they still made those plays count late in getting Kentucky’s offense off rhythm. They’re 95th in total defense if you only look at yards per game. But in yards per play, they’re 43rd. And play-for-play, in SP+ the defense rates 35th nationally: not great, but still something better than average.

Despite what we saw from Kentucky last night, this defense is still playing above what we expected from it coming into the year. In those SP+ ratings, the Vols are still in far better company than we thought we’d see in year one:

That 2012 squad is actually a decent comparison when we’re in our feelings about the defense. It’s just that those feelings feel different when you’re overperforming in a coach’s first year vs underperforming in a coach’s third. And that defense did have backbreaking end-of-game sequences against Florida and Mississippi State. Few are looking for revisionist history on Derek Dooley nine years after the fact. But we do still tend to think of 2012 as, “Offense good! Defense bad!”

This team has a great chance to be remembered for far more than that. The Ole Miss loss still feels, to most, like, “Referees bad!” And the Pitt loss gets some of that, along with -3 in turnovers. But in the long view, this team has done exactly what we hoped as a best-case scenario at the start of the year: split your toss-ups with Pitt, Missouri, Ole Miss, and Kentucky, and make sure you beat South Carolina. Missouri’s defense is way worse than we thought. But those other three teams are way better. I’m not sure anyone had us going 0-2 in Neyland and 2-0 on the road in that scenario, but we’ll take it. And what we saw for much of last night from the defense is what we feared we’d see all year…and we haven’t. And when it mattered most last night, we didn’t then either.

Who knows what Georgia will reveal, and perhaps the Vols will get another toss-up in the postseason. But I’d look for ways to give this defense credit at this point in the year, not take it from them.

Tennessee 45 Kentucky 42: One Stop

Two teams and several lifetimes ago, one of our favorite villains said something like, “We’ll make the free throws we need to make.” In a new era that feels increasingly like watching a basketball game, Josh Heupel got his first win over a ranked team in the Bluegrass. The offense was spectacular in a way that we’re just wholly unaccustomed to. The defense?

They made the stop(s) they needed to make.

I’m not sure how often we’ll see a game like this down the road. It felt like a bit of what we signed up for in bringing Heupel’s…well, Heuper Drive offense (shout out Joel) to Knoxville. It’s also tantalizing to watch a game like this and think, “Man, if we get some depth on defense…”.

Tennessee’s defense came into tonight 117th nationally in third down conversion percentage allowed, then gave up 12-of-17 to Kentucky. But three of Kentucky’s last five drives ended with Alontae Taylor’s pick six, and a pair of fourth down stops: a sack on 4th-and-7 with an all-out blitz, and enough pressure to force an uncatchable ball to the sideline on 4th-and-10. That made four straight incomplete passes for Will Levis, which sounds a lot better than the 4th-and-24 conversion that preceded it.

That’s one thing about this defense: late in the game, they get off the field when we need it. Against Pittsburgh, they forced consecutive punts when the Vols cut it to 41-34. The last three drives for Ole Miss ended with an interception, punt, and three-and-out. And it feels much better in victory tonight.

It feels a bit like relief, in part because the offense was so ridiculously good.

Tennessee had 9.81 yards per play, which includes three kneel downs by Hendon Hooker (otherwise known as 6.3% of our total snaps). That number was 8.76 at Missouri, in what felt like the greatest thing we’d seen in a long time. When the Vols set records against Troy in 2012, they did it with 9.45 yards per play.

Via SportSource Analytics, tonight is the second-best yards per play performance for the Vol offense of the post-Fulmer era. The only one better also came against Kentucky: 599 yards in 59 plays for Josh Dobbs and company in 2016. That’s 10.15 per play. Tonight, before the three kneel downs, the Vols had 10.66.

At Missouri, Hendon Hooker was 15-of-19 for 225 yards and three touchdowns, 11.8 yards per attempt. Tonight: 15-of-20 for 316 yards and four touchdowns, 15.8 yards per attempt. Against FBS foes, the best performance in yards per attempt for Tennessee quarterbacks with 20+ attempts in the post-Fulmer era? Before tonight, it was Jonathan Crompton against Memphis in 2009 (21-of-27 for 331 yards, 12.3 ypa). Against an SEC foe, it was Crompton against Georgia (20-of-27 for 310 yards, 11.5 ypa). Hooker, Heupel, and Tennessee’s receivers shattered those numbers tonight, and did it against a Kentucky defense that came in 32nd nationally in yards per attempt allowed.

Look, at some point we’ll stop making this comparison because it’s irrelevant. But at least for tonight: last year, Tennessee had three plays of 40+ yards. That’s three of 660 snaps, less than one half of one percent.

Tennessee had 10 plays of 40+ yards coming into tonight. Then they had three in 47 snaps in this game, plus two other gains of 37 yards.

That again creates imbalance in snaps and time of possession. It means your defense can get off the field more than they get credit for. It also means the times you don’t score on offense feel much worse, because they too are a much bigger percentage of the whole. The Vols got 45 points, and also had a fumbled exchange inside the Kentucky 30, couldn’t convert on 4th-and-8 inside the Kentucky 40, and of course walked away with nothing from 2nd-and-goal at the 4 with a chance to put the game away.

That sequence and the ensuing 4th-and-24 conversion from Kentucky gave us all a case of the oh-nos. And yet…the defense made the stops they needed to make.

The rules all change next week, when the Vols will shoot their shot against the number one team in the nation. But on the other side of that are South Alabama and Vanderbilt, which could represent wins six and seven for this team, giving them a chance to go bowling to get eight. 8-5 would be the best record for any first year coach at Tennessee since Phillip Fulmer. And more than that, Heupel got his ranked win, just the 10th in Knoxville since Fulmer left in 2008. It’s just the sixth Top 20 in that span.

At the extremes of what this offense and defense can and can’t do, the Vols got the win. The defense made the stop it needed to make. And Tennessee’s forward progress rolls on in an incredibly enjoyable year one.

Go Vols.

Tennessee at Kentucky Preview: Rivalry in Present Tense

Opportunity knocks tomorrow night in Lexington, where the Vols will face #18 Kentucky in 40 degree glory. Tennessee started as a four-point underdog this week, but this morning I’m seeing them some places at -1. SP+ likes the Vols by four. And in expected win totals, our community gives Tennessee a 53.9% chance of victory, which is indeed a higher number than we saw going into toss-ups with Pittsburgh, Missouri, and Ole Miss.

Josh Heupel’s team has played good football this season, really good compared to what we’ve seen before/thought we would again. In SP+ these Vols remain contemporaries of the 2009, 2012, and 2016 teams, and not the company of the last four years we thought they’d keep. They went deep into the night in Gainesville and Tuscaloosa. They had a chance to beat Pitt at -3 in turnovers. And they finished the Ole Miss game with a 74.1% win expectancy in SP+. It’s pointing in the right direction for the long haul.

This is the game to get to solidify the present.

Kill The Narrative

One thing the Kentucky game has done in the last ten years is drastically impact the narrative for Tennessee. We talked about this a lot during our lengthy period of coaching uncertainty last December, but when you look at Tennessee’s wilderness period as a whole, there are really only three games that could’ve single-handedly changed Tennessee’s fate in a significant way. There are many losses that weren’t close, many that were close but were followed by too many others. But I still think three games could’ve changed the story of Tennessee in the 2010s in a meaningful way. The fourth quarter of the 2007 SEC Championship Game, which would’ve kept Phillip Fulmer employed through 2008. Change one of any number of plays from the 2015 Florida game, and you’ve given Butch Jones an SEC East title in year three.

And the 2011 Kentucky loss, which might have kept more of the staff intact and prevented the defensive meltdown of 2012.

That 10-7 loss in Lexington, now celebrating its 10th anniversary, swung the narrative hard against Derek Dooley in ways the 2012 team/defense couldn’t recover from. It was at the time a blip on the radar: Tennessee won the next five in the series in the transition from Dooley to Butch and Joker Phillips to Mark Stoops. When the Cats won again in 2017 (despite the Vols being +4 in turnovers, because we attempted six field goals), it solidified the narrative, effectively ending the Butch Jones era. Take nothing away from how Kentucky fans felt about it, but for us it was almost a relief.

And then, last year.

There was more losing behind and before Jeremy Pruitt; it wasn’t one of those games that if you change a couple plays or the entire outcome, he’s still the coach here. But considering where we were at halftime the week before, and where we left that day in Knoxville? It’s one of the most dramatic and revealing swings we’ve experienced.

October 17, 2020 was originally Tennessee’s bye week in pre-covid world. So I, like many, was getting ready for a wedding. The Vols had a halftime lead on Georgia seven days earlier before turnovers buried them. “Can’t beat Georgia when you do that,” we thought, “but we’re still a good team.” Still won eight in a row before Athens. Kentucky was 1-2 with losses to Auburn and Ole Miss, plus a win over Mississippi State. And it was Tennessee who came into this one ranked 18th.

It happened slowly, at least as I remember listening to it on the radio, and then it happened very fast. There’s a freedom that comes from changing coaches and playing well that allows us to look back on this game this week and see that’s true. Kentucky went three-and-out, and Tennessee drove to the UK 30. But Jarrett Guarantano was sacked, and the Vols punted from their own 37.

Then Kentucky fumbled at their own 45 yard line, but Tennessee gave it right back at the 26. Kentucky punted again, and we went to the second quarter scoreless.

The first pick six came in Tennessee territory, raced back 41 yards for a 7-0 Kentucky lead. The Vols went backwards on the ensuing first down, but then ripped off gains of 25, 10, 9, and 8. First-and-10 at the UK 28, no problem.

And then the second pick six, 85 yards for a 14-0 Kentucky lead. Then J.T. Shrout, who threw an interception two plays later, leading to 17-0.

Tennessee had 4th-and-1 at their own 34 with five minutes to play in the half, went for it, and converted. Then Eric Gray and Ty Chandler carried the ball ten straight times for a touchdown. 17-7 at the break, with Tennessee’s defense keeping everything alive.

To open the third quarter, the Vols again had 4th-and-1 at their own 30. This time, Pruitt elected to punt. And this time, Kentucky pounced: 76 yards in 11 plays, facing nothing more than 3rd-and-1. 24-7 Cats midway through the third quarter. In response, the Vols got one first down before Guarantano was sacked, effectively ending the drive. Kentucky added three more. An unsportsmanlike conduct penalty ended the next drive, and Kentucky went 54 yards without facing anything more than 3rd-and-2. It was over with 11 minutes still on the clock. Lots of things felt over.

In Vegas, it’s the worst Tennessee has performed in the post-Fulmer era: favored by 6.5, lost by 27. Any remaining signs of life against Arkansas and Auburn died out in the same game. And the investigation sealed the deal on the Jeremy Pruitt era.

New Life From the Old

Losing to Kentucky in Knoxville for the first time since 1984 was, in many ways, the last remaining seal on the old days. There is no more, “Tennessee always beats _______________.” Removed from the heat of the moment, I think that can actually be a good thing. Too many years, too many tries, etc. – best to focus on the present, where Heupel and company are doing a great job so far.

And that’s what makes tomorrow night such a great opportunity: the chance to solidify that narrative for 2021 by beating a ranked team. The Vols would go to 5-4, with only a shot at #1 and assumed wins over South Alabama and Vanderbilt remaining. Maybe this kind of opportunity will present itself in a bowl game, maybe not. But it’s here today, and the Vols should feel like they have every opportunity to get it.

The team’s performance this year has left little doubt on whether moving on from Pruitt and company was a good thing. The investigation that ended his tenure is now ended itself, and there is no bowl ban coming from Tennessee’s side. The Vols are playing well, in hopes that recruiting will follow. And in this sport, everything follows winning, and Heupel has a chance to get his biggest one tomorrow night.

Credit Kentucky, as well, for the move from, “Losing to these guys costs everything,” to, “Beating these guys can solidify the present.” Advanced stats may not love them, but if they beat us? All that stands between them and a 10-2 season is Vanderbilt, New Mexico State, and the rivalry finish with Louisville. Even after last week, that may be all that stands between them and the Citrus Bowl, at worst. That would join the 2018 team as the program’s best bowl appearance since 1951.

Under Stoops, Kentucky is free from their past. And this, so far, has felt like a good time for the Vols to make a clean break from theirs, good and bad. The future remains too soon to tell overall in Knoxville, and Stoops’ good work may make this a more anxious ride on the coaching carousel in Lexington. But no matter what, both teams have done the good work this season of making this a really big game. For both teams. In the present.

Again, credit Heupel and this team for even getting in games like this in year one.

Now’s the time to win one.

Go Vols.

Expected Win Total Machine – Kentucky Week

Last week, our community projected the Vols to finish with 6.54 wins, just a hair down from the preseason total of 6.74 in preseason. That number was actually up from the week before (6.45), showing increased confidence in the Vols despite the loss at Alabama.

Considering our November schedule, the real difference between six and seven projected wins is what you think Tennessee will do on Saturday night in Lexington. Last week, our community gave Tennessee a 51.5% chance of victory in the Bluegrass, numbers similar to what we’ve seen against Ole Miss (47.2%), Missouri (52%), and Pittsburgh (49.2%). We thought those would be four toss-up-ish games in preseason, and they all felt about that way heading into kickoff.

But now, heading into this kickoff, Kentucky is fresh off a faceplant in Starkville.

So we’re running the machine again this week, to see how much more confident you’re feeling against the Wildcats. The Georgia number may change a bit as well after they stomped Florida, but we’ll worry about that next week.

Tennessee Basketball Preview: KenPom Tiers & Two Questions

A shout out, first of all, to Josh Heupel and the football team. There was more than one scenario here where we would’ve wanted to start the basketball conversation much sooner. Instead, it’s really a perfect setup: a first glimpse is available while the football team is off tomorrow, if you want it, via an exhibition with Lenoir-Rhyne (3:00 PM, SEC Network+). The real action doesn’t begin until Tuesday, November 9 vs UT-Martin. And the real action waits until the football Vols are through with Kentucky and Georgia, then is there for you on Saturday, November 20 when Tennessee faces Villanova in the Hall of Fame Tip-Off Tournament. (That game is at 1:00 PM, so you want that South Alabama kickoff to find its way to like 4:00).

Same as football with SP+, we find one of the best ways to put an upcoming season in context is with Ken Pomerory’s data. It’s no guarantee, and sometimes that’s a good thing. Preseason SP+ projections this season had us (rightfully) asking if Heupel’s first team could just be better than three of the last five seasons in the program’s basement. Instead, right now they’re playing at a level similar to 2009, 2012, and 2016, some of our most competitive football of the last 14 years.

But credit KenPom for nailing last year’s team, which was no small feat with Keon Johnson and Jaden Springer new to the mix. In preseason, they rated an even 20.00 (points better than the average team on a neutral floor in 100 possessions). After Baylor cut down the nets, their final rating was…19.95.

That put them in what we labeled the Dangerous Tier among recent Tennessee teams: they can beat anybody, but they’re not consistent enough to earn your full trust. That group is Tier C among UT’s last two decades.

Where does the 2022 team project at the start of the season?

  • Tier A – The Current Peak: 2019 (26.24 KenPom)
  • Tier B – The Fully Capable: 2014 (23.69), 2018 (22.27), 2008 (22.17), 2022 (21.60 preseason)
  • Tier C – The Dangerous: 2021 (19.95), 2006 (19.44), 2010 (18.50), 2007 (18.29)
  • Tier D – The Unnecessary Defense of Bruce Pearl: 2009 (16.48)
  • Tier E – The Bubble (but probably the NIT)
  • Tier F – That’s okay, we used to be a football school (Buzz Peterson’s last two years, Donnie Tyndall, Rick Barnes’ first year)

It might feel a little strange to put them in the tier above the group we labeled as less consistent. Cuonzo Martin’s final team is in Tier B, and there are hundreds of thousands of words spilled in the archives at Rocky Top Talk on all that. But at the end of the season, that group was playing at an extremely high level, and was a bang-bang call away from beating a #2 seed to advance to the Elite Eight.

The challenge with consistency will again be so many new faces on this team. Keon Johnson and Jaden Springer are out (Keon is yet to appear for the Clippers; Springer got two minutes of mop up duty in one game for the Sixers). So too is Yves Pons, yet to appear for the Grizzlies. I think his absence will be most noticeable, simply because there’s no one that can erase what he erased for Tennessee’s defense. The Vols also said farewell to Davonte Gaines and Drew Pember via the transfer portal; Gaines is with Kim English at George Mason, Pember at UNC Asheville.

Meanwhile, in is – gasp! – a true point guard, five-star Kennedy Chandler. He’s the highest-rated recruit of an impressive Rick Barnes era, trailing only Tobias Harris and Scotty Hopson on 247’s all-time list. In the CBS list of the 100 best players for the 2022 season, he came in 20th – not in the SEC or among freshmen, but overall.

In is five-star Brandon Huntley-Hatfield, a 6’9″ forward who we’ll be watching closely to see how the Vols utilize him in their lineups. In is Auburn transfer Justin Powell, who hit 44.3% from the arc as a freshman last year before suffering a concussion on January 2 that cost him the rest of the season.

And in is the rest of this freshman class, that by itself would’ve been an impressive haul for Tennessee at any point before the last three years: Jonas Aidoo, Jahmai Mashack, Quentin Diboundje, Zakai Zeigler, and Handje Tamba. It all added up to the #4 recruiting class in the nation.

What will it add up to for this Tennessee team?

We know Josiah Jordan-James, Santiago Vescovi, and Victor Bailey. And we really know John Fulkerson (who will miss tomorrow with a broken thumb but should be available for the opener). If he can return to his 2020 All-SEC form, he’ll be in for quite the finale.

There’s also much we haven’t learned yet about Uros Plavsic, and especially Olivier Nkamhoua, who’s getting a lot of preseason chatter. After that group of four upperclassmen (and, we assume, Kennedy Chandler), minutes are available, and valuable. The always excellent Will Warren has an in-depth preview with lineup projections.

The real answers will have to wait until we see all this newness for our own eyes. But the two biggest questions, as they relate to the difference between this year and last year, are this:

What does the defense look like without Yves Pons (or Kyle Alexander) to take away so many shots? Maybe BHH becomes that guy in a hurry, or Nkamhoua has turned into him. But the Vols have been in the Top 15 nationally in shot-blocking percentage the last three seasons. Pons was the individual player I watched the most on defense out of anyone who’s ever played here. Nothing was totally safe. It’s a huge part of what made this team such a force defensively on so many nights last year. With Barnes, you expect defense to lead the way. So what does that leading look like this season?

And who knocks down threes? The last two seasons, the answer has really been no one reliably: 31.3% from the arc in 2020, 33.1% last season. Jaden Springer shot 43.5% but only took 1.84 per game. Josiah was a woeful 30.8%. Yves Pons was 27.4%. The Vols brought in Powell, but keep an eye on Vescovi as well, especially when he’s on the floor with Chandler. He quietly hit 37.3% last season. If Tennessee can get answers here the way they did in 2018 and 2019 – not even spectacular, just solid – you expect a Barnes defense to more than do its job on the other end.

Last year I think we were more excited about the individual talents coming in than anything else; fair enough, we’re still inexperienced at having multiple five stars and what it does and doesn’t mean in March. This year we’ve got two more five stars, one of them rated even higher…but the conversation on Chandler feels less about his individual talent, and more about what it might do in service to this team. There are certainly questions of rotations and chemistry with so many new pieces. But there’s also an assumption that things will just be easier this time around than last year due to the virus.

The Vols are 13th overall (first in the SEC) in KenPom, 18th in the AP poll, and a five seed in ESPN’s bracketology. But there’s a quiet hope that this group might be able to play at a higher level with greater consistency than last year’s squad. We’ll need to see the defense against live fire to learn what they’ll do without Pons. But if the offense can just find a shooter or two – and Chandler should help create that – they’ll have an opportunity to put themselves in position to advance when it matters most.

Credit Heupel and the football team for having us hold off on this conversation until now. And credit Barnes and the basketball team for allowing us to believe big things are possible every year now.

Go Vols.