Tennessee
Tennessee Football Looking For First No. 1 Win Since 1985 Season | Rocky Top Insider
You’ll have to go back a few years to find Tennessee’s last win against the No. 1 ranked team in the nation.
As Rocky Top Insider’s Matt Reed put it this week during his game preview, Tennessee has had plenty of games against the top-ranked team in the nation after all the success that Alabama and Georgia have combined for in the last decade or so. But you’ll have to go all the way back to a September night in 1985 to find Tennessee’s last upset win.
Throwing for 259 yards and an impressive four touchdowns, Tennessee quarterback Tony Robinson led the Vols to a 38-20 win over No. 1 Auburn in Knoxville. The Vols’ defense held Bo Jackson to just 80 yards, which was eye-opening considering the future football icon was averaging 247.5 yards per game in the Tigers’ first two contests that season. Jackson’s numbers were hurt from the fact that he went down with an injury in the third quarter, though.
“I think we played as well as we can play against a good football team,” Tennessee head coach Johnny Majors said after the game. “We had confidence going into the game – healthy confidence, not overconfidence. We felt if we played a good, solid game we had the ability to win the game. And our young men could not have played harder. They gave and gave and played hard throughout the whole game.”
Fast forward 38 years later, which brings us to Saturday afternoon in Knoxville. The 18th-ranked Volunteers will look to end No. 1 Georgia’s perfect season and give the Bulldogs a loss before their SEC title game appearance against Alabama.
Tennessee is going to have to play their best game of the season on Saturday after an underwhelming performance against Missouri last weekend. The Vols have boasted one of the conference’s best rushing attacks and rush defenses this season but were effectively stuffed on both sides of the football during the game against the Tigers. Tennessee will need a stronger performance on the ground from their trio of running backs – and the legs of Joe Milton – to slash back against Georgia’s stout, physical front seven.
More from RTI: No. 1 Georgia at No. 18 Tennessee: How to Watch, Betting Odds, Key Stats and Info
You can look back at how Tennessee’s upset win over No. 1 Auburn sets up some key elements in the blueprint to success, too.
Tennessee will need explosive plays against Georgia, which is something that RTI’s Ryan Schumpert talked about in his keys to victory article from Friday. Explosive plays are something that helped elevate Robinson’s Vols over the Tigers including a 37-yard touchdown pass, a 30-yard touchdown pass, a 55-yard run, and three interceptions.
Former Tennessee wide receiver Tim McGee ended that game with 163 receiving yards and one touchdown. McGee spoke about the mindset that it took to win after the game.
“We didn’t want them to think they were playing an ordinary team today,” McGee said. “It was a very physical game. We executed well and did the things we needed to do to win.”
Tennessee wanted to strike first and take the fight to the top-ranked Tigers, not the other way around.
“We went into the game not being conservative but we were going to be more aggressive,” Robinson said after the victory. “Our game plan was simply to go after them. Our offense outplayed their defense and our defense outhustled their offense.”
One of the other similarities is that both games were/will be played in Knoxville. Tennessee beat Auburn in front of 94,358 Neyland Stadium spectators in 1985 and is expecting a sold-out crowd of 101,915 this Saturday. While the Bulldogs enter the game with a 26-game winning streak, Tennessee has a home-winning streak of their own at 14 straight wins. The Vols’ crowd has helped lift Tennessee to victories over Florida, Alabama, and Kentucky during the streak under head coach Josh Heupel.
It won’t be an easy task, but it never is. Tennessee will have to take advantage of key situations and even use a little luck to beat Georgia this coming Saturday in Neyland Stadium. The Bulldogs have already claimed their spot in the SEC Championship game while the Vols are looking to avenge last week’s loss to Missouri and continue to build to a 9-3 regular season finish.
Go back to Johnny Majors’ comment from the beginning of the post for a message in how to win this game: Have healthy confidence, not overconfidence. Play a good, solid game. Play hard throughout the game.
That’s what the Vols did in 1985.
Streaks will collide in Knoxville at 3:30 p.m. ET on Saturday as Tennessee looks to knock off the No. 1 ranked team in the nation for the first time in a long time.
Tennessee
Where Tennessee stands in D1 Baseball Preseason Top 25
After a season that ended unlike any other in program history, Tennessee will begin its 2025 season in an unfamiliar spot, too: defending national champions.
On the heels of their first-ever College World Series title, the Vols begin another campaign of high expectations in a little more than a month. They’ll also start ranked highly in the polls.
TALK ABOUT IT IN THE ROCKY TOP FORUM
Tennessee debuted at No. 4 in the D1 Baseball Preseason Top 25 on Monday–32 days before it opens the season with a three-game series against Hofstra on Feb. 14 at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.
The Vols’ home field is currently under-going its next phase of construction. New stands were added down the third base line prior to last season and stadium will have a couple of other noticeable changes by first pitch. It will also have a new national championship banner.
Tennessee and eighth-year head coach Tony Vitello will have their work cut out for it in its defense of that crown, though and it will have to do it without some of the key pieces that helped earn it, including sluggers Christian Moore and Blake Burke. Third baseman Billy Amick and outfielders Kavares Tears and Dylan Dreiling are gone, as well as some big arms, including Drew Beam and A.J. Causey.
The Vols have some notable returners that were also paramount in their CWS run last June. Hunter Ensley, one of the heroes of Tennessee’s championship final triumph of Texas A&M, headlines the outfield and Dean Curley is back after a standout freshman campaign at shortstop.
Right-handed pitcher Nate Snead is the leader among the pitching staff.
MORE FROM VOLREPORT: Tennessee 2025 baseball schedule released
Several of the Vols’ opponents were included in the poll, too. In fact, the SEC was heavily represented, to little surprise.
The league is poised to continue its long-standing dominance of college baseball with nine teams ranked, including six teams in the top 10.
Texas A&M leads the way at No. 1, followed by LSU (3), Arkansas (5), Georgia (8) and Florida (10).
Vanderbilt (16), Mississippi State (18) and Texas (19) made up for the rest of the league’s representation in the poll.
All of those teams reached the postseason a year ago, with Texas A&M and Florida joining Tennessee in the CWS field in Omaha and the Vols will have to play a three-game series against five of the teams ranked in the top 25.
Tennessee
Sunday Standings: Tennessee Women’s Basketball 8th In SEC Standings
The Lady Vols are 8th after a close loss and a dominant win during this week’s contests.
Tennessee had a tough loss against the sixth ranked team in the nation however they bounced back earlier in the day to defeat the Razorbacks by 30 points. Elsewhere Mississippi State upset the Oklahoma Sooners and No. 2 South Carolina dominated the Longhorns.
Here are all of the scores from this week.
Thursday, January 9th, 2025
Sunday, January 12th, 2025
Tennessee dropped in the rankings after a loss earlier in the week but maintained a middle tier ranking after their big win on Sunday.
Below are the full rankings in the SEC.
- #2 South Carolina (16-1) (C: 4-0)
- #15 Kentucky (15-1) (C: 4-0)
- #6 LSU (18-0) (C: 3-0)
- #5 Texas (16-2) (C: 3-1)
- #18 Alabama (16-2) (C: 3-1)
- Mississippi State (15-3) (C: 2-2)
- #10 Oklahoma (14-3) (C: 2-2)
- #16 Tennessee (14-2) (C: 2-2)
- Ole Miss (11-5) (C: 2-2)
- Florida (11-7) (C: 2-2)
- Vanderbilt (14-3) (C: 1-2)
- Georgia (9-9) (C: 1-3)
- Texas A&M (8-8) (C: 1-3)
- Arkansas (8-11) (C: 1-3)
- Missouri (11-8) (C: 0-4)
- Auburn (9-8) (C: 0-4)
Make sure to follow our website Tennessee on SI.
Tennessee
Tess Darby available for Lady Vols basketball vs Arkansas on SEC injury report
Tess Darby is available for Lady Vols basketball at Arkansas on Sunday.
The fifth-year senior guard was upgraded from probable on the game day SEC injury report released two hours before No. 15 Tennessee (13-2, 1-2 SEC) plays at Arkansas (8-10, 1-2) at Bud Walton Arena in Fayetteville, Arkansas, on Sunday (1 p.m. ET, SEC Network).
Darby missed Tennessee’s two-point loss to No. 4 LSU with a rolled right ankle. She wore a short boot on her right foot at Food City Center on Thursday.
Darby is averaging 8.4 points and 2.4 rebounds and is shooting 34% from 3-point range on 6.7 attempts per game. She has started in six of the 14 games she has appeared in this season and averages 17.4 minutes.
There were no new injuries on the SEC student-athlete availability report. All Arkansas players are available and Tennessee is only without Kaiya Wynn, who is out for the season after tearing her Achilles.
Cora Hall covers University of Tennessee women’s athletics. Email her at cora.hall@knoxnews.com and follow her on Twitter @corahalll. If you enjoy Cora’s coverage, consider a digital subscription that allows you to access all of it.
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