Tennessee
Why the offensive versatility of Tennessee separates them from the rest
Why the Offensive Versatility of Tennessee Separates them from the Pack
The Tennessee Volunteers had one of the most impressive performances of Week 2, which resulted in them moving from No. 14 to No. 7 in the most recent AP Top 25 poll following their dominant 51-10 win over NC State in Charlotte on Saturday.
Tennessee’s offense had their way versus the Wolfpack, getting it done in the run game and the pass game with an offensive attack led by redshirt freshman quarterback Nico Iamaleava. A scheme that Volquest‘s Brent Hubbs believes is misunderstood and dangerous for any defense they face this season.
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“I don’t think anybody truly understands the versatility of the Josh Huepel offense, it’s the Art Briles system that he’s tweaked,” Hubbs said at the On3 Roundtable. “And everybody thinks of Jalin Hyatt going down the middle of the field against Alabama and they think of just over the top throwing plays, explosive plays, 60-70 yard touchdowns.”
“The reality of this offense is they’re very much rooted in the run game and they can play the run game in a variety of ways.”
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After leading the SEC in passing yards per game in 2022, Heupel and the offense adapted last season and led the conference in rushing. But so far this season with Tennessee’s personnel on offense, the offensive mastermind has been able to place the Vol’s rushing attack in a position where they may now be at the peak of their powers.
“They got RPO off of it, they can run the stretch, they can run tight end lead, power. They got into a two tight end set Saturday night against NC State to kind of neutralize some of that 3-3-5 look that State plays. And Dave Doeren, NC State’s head coach, said after the game we weren’t expecting that and we really hadn’t prepared much for that. And Tennessee got into it, liked it, and stayed in it, and adapted to it,” Hubbs explained.
The Vols rushed for 249 yards on Saturday, highlighted by 132 yards and two scores on the ground for running back Dylan Sampson and Iamaleava ending the game as the team’s second-leading rusher with 65 yards on the ground and a rushing touchdown of his own. A ground attack that will only make things easier for the young, talented signal caller in the passing game.
“So the versatility that they have in the run game makes Tennessee unique and I think we’re only going to see Nico get better as the season goes along here,” Hubbs added. “But they can run the football effectively with Dylan Samson, those backs, to take some of the pressure off of Nico. Which I think is a good thing, it’s not going to be all on him to make a bunch of plays if they can continue to run the football schematically the way that they did.”
Iamaleava threw for 211 yards and two touchdowns as well in Saturday’s game, and it will surely be fascinating to continue watching him grow within Tennessee’s offense and see what heights he can potentially lead the Volunteers to this season.
Tennessee
Report: ICE arrests decline in Tennessee
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Tennessee
Tennessee basketball freshman guard plans to transfer
The 2025-26 college basketball season will conclude Monday with a national championship game between Michigan and UConn at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana. Tipoff is slated for 8:50 p.m. EDT (TBS).
Tennessee advanced to its third consecutive NCAA Tournament Elite Eight in 2026.
The NCAA transfer portal will open Tuesday after the national title game.
Tennessee freshman guard Clarence Massamba plans to enter the NCAA transfer portal, according to Joe Tipton of On3.
“Tennessee guard Clarence Massamba plans to enter the NCAA transfer portal, Joe Tipton reports,” On3 announced Monday.
Three players from Tennessee’s 2025-2026 roster are graduating: point guard Ja’Kobi Gillespie, shooting guard Amaree Abram and center Felix Okpara. Tennessee has three commitments in its 2026 basketball recruiting class: small forward Ralph Scott, power forward Manny Green and point guard Marquis Clark.
Former Belmont shooting guard Tyler Lundblade committed to the Vols on April 1. Power forward Cade Phillips was the first member of Tennessee’s 2025-2026 basketball team to declare his entry into the transfer portal on Friday.
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Tennessee
After getting help from health care charity RAM, Tennessee man says he
Dave Burge slept in his truck overnight in frigid weather for a dental appointment.
Burge needed dentures, but was unable to afford them. He was one of more than 1,200 patients, some of whom waited in line for days, to get a free appointment at a Remote Area Medical pop-up clinic in Knoxville, Tennessee. RAM provides medical, dental and vision care to uninsured and underinsured Americans around the country.
“When they hand you your life back, that’s life changing,” Burge said. “That’s what teeth mean to me. I could be a normal human again.”
The people who need help
Burge already spent around $140,000 on medical bills after an uninsured drunk driver ran a red light and nearly killed him in 2012, he said. Then, one day, a construction accident while at work wrecked his teeth again.
“By then I was pretty thin on money to do much about it. So I didn’t have a lot of choices. I just kept working.”
Sandra Tallent, who drove more than 200 miles from Alabama and spent two nights sleeping in her car for a dental appointment with RAM, said she would also be unable to afford dentures if not for the free clinic.
Health care is a major cost across the U.S., and one many cannot afford. About a third of Americans say they’ve skipped meals, borrowed money or cut back on utilities to pay for health care, according to a March Gallup poll.
And while the Trump administration has lowered prices on more than 50 drugs, it has also let premiums rise in the Affordable Care Act marketplace, and made the biggest cuts ever under Medicaid. Around 3 million people have lost insurance under the Trump administration, according to government data, and it’s estimated up to 10 million could lose insurance in the next three years.
About half of the patients at RAM clinics have no insurance. The rest have insurance they can’t afford to use because of co-pays and deductibles – or they can’t find a provider who will take their insurance.
According to RAM CEO Chris Hall, approximately 60% of patients need dental care. About 30% request eye exams and glasses, with around 5% asking for medical care. There’s also screenings for blood sugar, blood pressure, breast cancer, skin cancer and more.
The volunteers helping
RAM, which got its start decades ago parachuting doctors into South American jungles, today operates clinics nearly every weekend around the U.S.
“Nobody here that’s working or volunteering today is going to judge any person that comes through that door. We are here to help,” Brad Sands, a former paramedic who coordinates RAM clinics, said.
There were 887 volunteers at the Knoxville weekend. Medical professionals pay their own way to come and bring medical students with them.
“I’ve said it a million times, if you ever lose faith in humanity, go spend ten minutes at a RAM clinic. You’re going to see hundreds of people there that are donating their time,” Sands said. “They’re coming out and they’re donating large swaths of their own money, slash time, to help their neighbors.
Dr. Glen Goldstein, a New Jersey dentist, started volunteering with RAM after seeing a 60 Minutes report in 2008 on the organization.
“And as soon as your segment was over, about this organization, I immediately went online, looked it up and registered down here,” he said.
In the years since, volunteering with RAM has become a regular event in his family, with his wife, his children and his daughter-in-law volunteering as well.
Goldstein said he sees patients who’ve suffered without health care, and who have no hope for the future. He’s had young patients who’ve asked him to remove all their teeth, because they don’t have money to get them fixed.
“And it’s heartbreaking to take all the teeth out,” Golden said. “It’s terrible.”
RAM operations
Depending on the size of the clinic, RAM will spend between $100,000 and $500,000 over a weekend. The money comes from donations, Hall, the CEO, said.
“Over 81% of our supporters are individual donors, people that write $5, $10, $20 checks every month,” Hall said.
RAM also gets supplies and clinic space donated.
The charity got its start under the late Stan Brock, an eccentric Englishman, who was a cowboy in the Amazon, a pilot, and later one of the stars of TV’s “Wild Kingdom.” When 60 Minutes met Brock in 2008, he was 73, had no family, took no salary, lived in an office he donated to RAM, and showered with a garden hose.
At the time, he was staging 12 clinics a year. After the broadcast, $4 million in donations poured in, along with thousands more volunteers. RAM now runs 90 clinics a year.
RAM has now treated more than a million patients since its start, thanks to more than a quarter-million volunteers.
Across the Knoxville weekend, RAM provided over a million dollars in medical care, at no cost to the patients. RAM volunteers treated 1,224 patients, made 588 pairs of glasses, pulled 1,467 teeth, filled 283 cavities, did 342 dental cleanings and conducted 247 medical exams.
And then there were the denture patients, including Dave Burge and Sandra Tallent.
At the Knoxville clinic, there was a trailer where 3D printers were used to make and print dentures. Connor Gibson, the 22-year-old engineer who helped build it, has slept in the trailer to keep the printers running nonstop. He’s inspired by something he calls the mirror moment: when a patient with a new set of dentures sees themselves in the mirror.
“You just see all that stress melt away. And no matter if they’re 18 or 80, we see grown men cry sitting in the chair,” Gibson said.
Burge and Tallent, with their new sets of dentures, both smiled when they had their mirror moments.
“I don’t know what I’d do [without RAM,]” Tallent said. “You know, the Lord would make a way. But I feel like he has made a way through RAM.”
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