Tennessee Football: Trust In Offense Allows For Gutsy Play Calling
By all traditional thinking of playing football, Tennessee should have never gone for it on fourth-and-five on the first drive of its game against Virginia.
By all traditional thinking of playing football, Tennessee should have never gone for it on fourth-and-five on the first drive of its game against Virginia.
Tennessee’s offense started off slow on Saturday against Virginia. A season ago, that probably would’ve meant a bad outcome for the Vols. Saturday showed that
Tennessee’s tailbacks have no reason to complain about not getting enough carries. Despite a crowded backfield, the Vols got all three of their top tailbacks
Tennessee fumbled a punt, dropped a potential touchdown pass, failed on fourth-and-1 from its 29-yard line and went one-for-seven on third downs. Yet, the Vols
It looked like a relatively easy win. Tennessee Football dominated the Virginia Cavaliers 49-13. However, the game didn’t look like it was going that way
Tennessee’s highly publicized offense didn’t have one of its most stellar days by recent comparison. No matter. They didn’t need to score seven touchdowns to
Tennessee quarterback Joe Milton’s highly anticipated debut as a starting quarterback – again – is in the books. Perhaps the third time is the charm?
Despite a slow start for Tennessee Football, the Vols were able to get things rolling late in the second quarter, and they cruised to a
Josh Heupel’s third season as Tennessee Football head coach kicks off Saturday at noon. The Vols face the Virginia Cavaliers in Nashville, Tenn., at Nissan