Tennessee
What Tennessee coach Josh Heupel said about Arkansas, Florida on Monday
What head coach Josh Heupel said during his weekly press conference on Monday, looking back at the 19-14 loss at Arkansas and previewing No. 8 Tennessee’s game against Florida on Saturday night (7 Eastern Time, ESPN) at Neyland Stadium:
Opening Statement
“Hope everybody’s doing great. The morning got a good start with the guys. Obviously it’s an opportunity and time of the week where you look back at the football game and how we get better. Whether you win or lose, it’s important by the time you go out on the field with the guys that you flush it, you move on. And as competitors you’re only as good as your next one. Everybody in the building disappointed with the outcome on Saturday night. You can’t do anything about that at this point other than take the lessons and push forward and continue to, to grow as a football team. And you know, so in that way, no matter what happened the previous week, you got to move on. Guys we’re good. Took the information and had a good demeanor out on the practice field. So it’s important for us that we get off to a good start and prepare the right way, just like it is every single week for us.
“This week, coming back home. Excited to be back in Neyland Stadium and it’s been been a month since we got a chance to be in there, play in there and see our fans. So looking forward to seeing them. We need to create a great environment. I know we will, like always. We need to have the Neyland effect in effect on Saturday night. And it’s our responsibility as football team to prepare and practice the right way to go play. But our fans can be a huge part of the environment and the football game as well.
“So looking forward to it. Florida is playing its best ball right now. They continue to get better throughout the course of the season. That’s really in all three phases. Defensively, long, athletic, have speed Offensively, both the quarterbacks are playing really good football right now. And the offensive line is really solid.”
Tennessee’s offense not establishing tempo the last two games
“This past week, offensively, you look at the football game, so many self-inflicted wounds. Pre-snap penalties, playing penalties, miscommunication. So at times you’re not playing on tempo. In the course of drives when we’ve wanted to play with tempo, we’ve been able to do it and play it efficiently. D-Samp’s big run, there’s multiple instances of it. At the end of the day you got to play smart, effective football. The prior week (at Oklahoma) I certainly slowed things down in the second half and played a different style just because of the flow of the football game. And I tried to play all three phases together. For us, we got to do the ordinary things at a really high level. Last week we didn’t do that very well. The week before that we did a lot of things really well.”
Pass protection issues, if they were pre or post snap and Arkansas’ odd front
“Structurally, that is what the last couple opponents have decided to play against us. Certainly capable last week of attacking and performing better than we did in the run game and in the pass game. Again, some of the things that we control, not taking anything away from Arkansas, but some of the things that we control, we did not handle very well. You heard me say it already, but communication was a big part of it and then the penalties just changes the way the game is played. Too many third-and-longs so you got to be ready to go attack what we see on game day.”
If defenses are disguising things to make it harder on Nico Iamaleava
“Nico played really well a week ago (Oklahoma). Clean in his decision making, decisive, accurate with the football. This past week, first play of the ball game, rips a nice ball. Sum of all parts. As the game went on, we didn’t play as clean. Some of that’s Nico. Some of that’s the guys around him. At the quarterback position, takes 10 guys around you playing at a high level too. So sum of all parts, all 11 operating, doing— I’m going to say ordinary things that are really high level, consistently is the difference in the ball game.”
If he thinks teams will continue to do that
“Yeah. The last couple of years we’ve seen four down (fronts), five down, three down, seeing those structures. We got to go attack it and play well.:
The play of Lance Heard and John Campbell, where they need to be better
“We love those guys, believe in those guys. Those two, like pretty much everybody offensively, can perform at a higher level as we go. And have performed at a higher level than they did the other night and some of that’s just ordinary things— fundamentals, technique, alignment, assignment and technique.”
If offensive line issues were communication or losing one-on-one
“Some of it’s just one-on-one battles.”
If he should have taken a timeout after the deep pass to Dont’e Thornton on two-minute drive
“In hindsight, yep, for sure. As I recognized that we weren’t immediately ready thought about going to timeout then I thought we were ready to get the ball off in the next couple seconds and every time out at the end of the game creates a different scenario where you’re not pushing the ball into the end zone, forced to push the ball into the end zone. So yeah, absolutely.”
The challenges of preparing for two Florida quarterbacks in Graham Mertz and DJ Lagway
“Yeah, I think both of ’em have played smart football, they’ve been accurate with the football in particular the last couple of weeks. They both operate within the system extremely well. Both have the ability to run the football and move and extend and make plays. You know, young kid (Lagway) is dynamic with the ball in his hands.
Florida’s defensive front
“Yeah, they’re multiple in what they do. That’s their front. Suits their coverages on the back end. It’s the pressures that they apply and they can get to the quarterback with just a four-down front, too. So, you know, for us, communication, understanding where we’re working to, recognizing the pressure. That can be the front five guys, it’s your back, it’s your tight end at times as well. All gotta be in sync and then you gotta play good football. You gotta play the fundamentals and in technique and win your one on one. But another part of that is going and winning on the outside. Doing it quickly and quarterback being decisive. All 11 guys gotta play together.”
How he thought the team’s preparation was going into the Arkansas game
“I thought Tuesday’s practice during the bye week was really good. Wednesday’s was a different type of practice. I thought our preparation was solid last week. End of the day we didn’t go perform the way we needed to and so that’s personal accountability and team accountability.”
If there’s an update on Squirrel White, Bru McCoy or Bryson Eason
“None of the injuries are long-term, season-ending injuries. As we go through the week, we’ll find out exactly where everybody’s at. You guys can look forward to the injury report on Wednesday.”
Tennessee
Deputies perform ‘life-saving measures’ after 5-year-old falls into swimming pool in Tennessee
FAYETTEVILLE, Tenn. (WSMV) – A Tennessee sheriff’s office is asking the community to pray for a family whose 5-year-old was hospitalized after falling into a swimming pool.
The Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office said deputies and family members were “administering life-saving measures” Thursday afternoon after pulling the child out of the water.
The child was then transferred to a hospital, where they are still being treated.
“The child was subsequently transported to the hospital, where they are currently receiving medical care‚” said a Facebook post from the sheriff’s office. “Out of respect for the family’s privacy, no further details will be released at this time.”
Copyright 2025 WSMV. All rights reserved.
Tennessee
Why first quarter was ‘crucial’ in Mississippi State’s loss to Tennessee
Sam Purcell felt good about the game plan for Mississippi State women’s basketball’s matchup with Tennessee.
But the Bulldogs gave up 26 points in the first quarter and trailed by seven points. It was a deficit they never recovered from in a 90-80 loss to the Lady Vols at Humphrey Coliseum on Jan. 8.
“You look at that that first quarter, I thought it was crucial. We had a great scout, a great game plan, but we didn’t talk on ball screens,” Purcell said. “Their largest quarter was that first quarter, and we’re going to watch back and go, dang it, we need to be more vocal. And you got to give them credit – top to bottom, they’re probably as good as anybody in the country with athleticism. So you can’t let those athletic kids turn the corner for wide open layups, and we did.”
Kharyssa Richardson and Madison Francis led the Bulldogs with 22 points each, but MSU didn’t have enough defense to pull off the upset.
Had Mississippi State been able to slow down Tennessee’s drivers in the first quarter, it may have been a different result. But once the Bulldogs started slowing that down, the Lady Vols were “phenomenal hitting some big-time shots,” Purcell said.
Tennessee only had the edge in points in the paint, 42-40, but it also went 10-for-27 on 3-pointers, which was an area Mississippi State couldn’t match. The Bulldogs shot 2-for-13 from deep.
MSU also couldn’t stop Tennessee freshman point guard Mia Pauldo, who scored a game-high 26 points on 8-for-12 shooting. The Bulldogs sent her to the foul line time and time again, and she went 8-for-9 on free throws.
“I thought (Pauldo) was poised, she was clutch,” Purcell said. “Obviously, that’s what you need in games like this that are gonna come down the to the wire. You need players to step up, and I thought she was the X factor for them.”
Tennessee
Former Tennessee Football Legend Accepts SEC Coaching Gig
The Tennessee Volunteers have been one of the main teams when it comes to producing talent and sending talent to the NFL, which is something that has often been discovered as a standard for the football program. This is something that has been going on for quite some time and isn’t anything new to the news cycle, as the Vols have been able to produce plenty of talented prospects.
Tennessee is the home of many stars, including some of the best defensive players in SEC history. Guys like Eric Berry have found their way through the Tennessee program and onto the NFL, where they would have legendary careers. However, the defensive side of the football is the only side that has produced plenty of talent, as Tennessee has produced a lot of offensive talent as well. With the likes of Peyton Manning and company, the Vols have shown a great track record in getting talent drafted.
The Vols have produced someone who could be considered as one of the best players to play the Tide end position, as the Knoxville, Tennessee program is the home to Dallas Cowboys legend, Jason Witten. Witten is someone who made the most of his career and has been viewed as a top player at the Tide in position, and someone who is often referred to as a legend for the Cowboys, along with being a legend in the game of football as a whole.
Jason Witten Accepts TE Coach Position For Oklahoma
Witten is now taking a new gig, which has him in a huge role inside the Southeastern Conference. The Vols legend is now the tight end coach for the Oklahoma Sooners. The Sooners have had some success out of their tight ends in the past, but the sky is the limit with a guy like Witten coaching up the players. Witten has the opportunity to do really well, as coaching tight ends won’t be an issue, and you have to imagine that he will be able to recruit very well, considering he has a huge name around him, as this is something that we have seen from positional coaches as well as head coaches who have done great work in the league. You have to imagine that the Vols will now have stiff competition for his son, Cooper, who is a five-star recruit for the upcoming 2027 class at the linebacker position.
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