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Tennessee Football Lands Top 20 Spot in USA Today’s Post-Spring College Football Rankings | Rocky Top Insider
Spring football is well past wrapped up by now, with summer workouts standing in between now and training camp later in the fall. The 2026 college football season will be here before we know it as revamped rosters look to compete for the sport’s biggest prize next winter.
Tennessee Football has seen, and will see, plenty of major changes this offseason. For one, the Vols will have a new quarterback at the helm. Tennessee signal-caller Joey Aguilar didn’t win his court case for an additional year of eligibility, meaning that the Vols will roll into the season with a new starting quarterback. Redshirt freshman George MacIntyre, true freshman Faizon Brandon, and Colorado transfer Ryan Staub are all in the mix for that spot.
Another big change for UT this offseason is a retooled defensive staff and roster. On the coaching side of things, Tennessee brought in Jim Knowles to serve as the Vols’ defensive coordinator after letting go of Tim Banks. Knowles opted to keep Rodney Garner and William Inge in their respective spots and rounded out his staff with co-DC and safeties coach Anthony Poindexter, LEOs coach AJ Jackson, and cornerbacks coach Derek Jones. Tennessee has a few key returning starters on the defense, such as DL Daevin Hobbs, LB Arion Carter, and CB Ty Redmond, but the Vols also brought in several players through the portal to compete for starting and rotational spots.
With spring slates over with, USA Today decided to rank all 138 FBS programs heading into the summer. Paul Myerberg has Tennessee coming in at No. 18 in the country, one spot behind Arizona and one spot above Houston.
Tennessee lands as the eighth highest-ranked SEC team on the list, behind No. 3 Texas, No. 4 Georgia, No. 7 Oklahoma, No. 9 Texas A&M, No. 12 Alabama, No. 13 Ole Miss, and No. 16 LSU. Other notable in-conference teams include No. 35 Vanderbilt, No. 38 Florida, No. 43 Missouri, and No. 94 Kentucky. The lowest-ranked SEC team is No. 109 Arkansas.
Based on 2025 win-loss records, Tennessee Football has the 20th-toughest schedule in the nation in 2026. Additionally, the Vols’ path is the 11th-toughest among SEC teams. Tennessee will have five home SEC games and four road SEC games this season as part of the conference’s new nine-game slate. The Vols will also hit the road to take on Georgia Tech in the second week of the season.
Here’s a look at the Vols’ schedule next fall:
- Sept. 5 – vs Furman
- Sept. 12 – at Georgia Tech
- Sept. 19 – vs Kennesaw State
- Sept. 26 – vs Texas
- Oct. 3 – vs Auburn
- Oct. 10 – at Arkansas
- Oct. 17 – vs Alabama
- Oct. 24 – at South Carolina
- Oct. 31 – OPEN
- Nov. 7 – vs Kentucky
- Nov. 14 – at Texas A&M
- Nov. 21 – vs LSU
- Nov. 28 – at Vanderbilt
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Some important questions will begin to be answered when Tennessee returns to the field for fall training camp in August. For one, which quarterback separates themselves from the pack and starts the first game of the season? Additionally, how quickly can Tennessee’s new-look roster pick up Jim Knowles’ defensive scheme?
One other important thing that’ll be happening behind the scenes is how Tennessee looks after a full offseason in Derek Owings’ strength and conditioning program. Owings joined Tennessee’s staff this offseason after helping Indiana win last year’s national championship, and is widely looked upon as one of, if not the best, in the business at what he does.
Stay tuned to Rocky Top Insider for more Tennessee Football offseason coverage.