Tag Archives: tennessee game

Locker room scene hits internet from Vol/Vandy game

I am involved with my relatives in a football pickem contest every week and the winner gets 50 dollars from a local newspaper. It is a fun time when we all get to pick the winners of 10 football games every week. I knew the Vandy at Tennessee game was going to be close this week, but I picked Tennessee because of the tradition that Tennessee has. I have discovered that many times the tradition rich team will find a way to win. (By the way, I also picked Oregon to beat Stanford too.)

One thing I was surprised to see a few days later was a scene from the Tennessee locker room hit the internet. Everyone knows what coaches say behind closed doors but you just expect to see it on the internet.

Franklin: UT’s celebration will remain open wound

  • TERESA M. WALKER – AP Sports Writer (AP)
  • Posted November 21, 2011 at 3:43 p.m., updated November 21, 2011 at 4:32 p

NASHVILLE — Vanderbilt’s James Franklin says he won’t soon forget the Commodores’ latest and perhaps most painful loss to Tennessee.

The coach says the way the Vols celebrated their 27-21 overtime win – which included coachDerek Dooley boasting how the Vols always beat Vanderbilt – will be a wound he leaves open until next year.

And luckily, there’s video available for the Commodores to watch over and over again.

“We’ll watch it as many times as we have to watch it next year,” Franklin said Monday. “That’s a wound I’m going to leave open. It’s not going to heal. I’m going to leave it open all year, and we’ll discuss it next year.”

Franklin said he knows his Commodores hurt themselves plenty with four turnovers and bad penalties last weekend. The final turnover was Eric Gordon’s interception return for a touchdown that officials reviewed, which theSoutheastern Conference admitted two hours later was messed up. Tennessee should have gone on offense instead.

The Vanderbilt coach said Monday he prefers to see the Vols’ celebration as a sign of respect.

“Some people act like they won the Super Bowl, and they beat a team that the two previous years had won four games total,” Franklin said. “Obviously, we’re winning, closing the gap and threatening some people and making some people uncomfortable. We’ll leave it at that. We’ll move on. We’ll have a lot of discussions about this next year when the time’s right.”

Three hours’ away in Knoxville, Dooley was disappointed video of what happened inside Tennessee’s locker room was shared, but he called it the world today.

“It’s like there’s no sacred place, and I think probably all the 120 coaches out there in football have a side to them where they loosen to the team that they don’t do in the public,” Dooley said. “Am I excited after a win? I always am. After a win is emotional, and certainly when you win a close game down to the wire, it’s exciting. You take those things for what they are. It’s a postgame, emotional, have a little fun, and then you close the door on it when you leave.”

Franklin called it a tough loss and said as rewarding as this season has been that it may be his most challenging with the tough losses combined with unusual situations. Four of Vanderbilt’s losses in the SEC this season have come by a combined 19 points.

“You can’t turn it over, especially on the road and especially early in the game and allow the momentum to swing like that. When you have four turnovers, three interceptions and a fumble, it’s hard to recover from that,” Franklin said.

The Commodores also racked up seven penalties for 46 yards, including a costly flag on lineman Josh Jelesky for a low block nowhere near a play that wiped out a huge gain by Chris Boyd down to the Tennessee 1. Franklin said he had never seen a play go from the 1 to the other 1 in two plays.

“There’s been more freakish things happen in this season than I’ve ever been around,” Franklin said.

“All I can do is coach that kid and put him in position and emphasize how important it is not making those mistakes. It wasn’t just that play. It was six or seven plays. There’s no doubt that was a dramatic one,” Franklin said.

Franklin’s bigger challenge now is rallying his Commodores (5-6) needing a win Saturday at Wake Forest (6-5) to be bowl eligible. It’s something only the Commodores thought could happen in Franklin’s first year, but now their first road win would extend their season with their second bowl game in four years.

“We’re in a one-game season,” Franklin said. “Truly, I’ve been saying that all year. We’re in a one-game season. We win this week, we’ll have more opportunities in the future probably more so than ever. The argument that I’m making is that we’ve got a one-game season, and we truly do. We win this week we’ll have more opportunities, and we’ll see what happens.”

Defensive tackle Rob Lohr said they have no problem refocusing on Wake Forest.

“We want to prove ourselves,” Lohr said. “Nobody wants to lose, let alone the way we did. So we need to bounce back this week and get a W so we can go to a bowl game.”

___

AP Sports Writer Beth Rucker in Knoxville, Tenn., contributed to this report.

To see Tennessee’s celebration in the locker room celebration see YouTube

The two games I saw this week (Tenn at Florida, Troy at Arkansas) jh21

This weekend I got to see two games on TV. I wanted to make a few comments about both games. Arkansas finally put away Troy 38-28 and Florida finally put away Tennessee 33-23.

I told my kids that Arkansas was going to be facing a tough opponent this week in Troy. Harry King agreed evidently:

Well-informed Razorback fans, here’s a trivia question: What four opposing quarterbacks are on the Davey O’Brien watch list?

Thinking cap on, I came up with Texas A&M’s Ryan Tannehill, Tennessee’s Tyler Bray and Mississippi State’s Chris Relf. Knowing the watch list was released in mid-July, Alabama, Auburn and LSU were eliminated because the quarterback situation at those schools was unsettled at the time.

South Carolina’s oft-suspended Stephen Garcia was the red herring.

The final member of the quartet is Troy’s Corey Robinson, who will have an opportunity to show off this evening in Fayetteville. Two-thirds of the 38 on the watch list are from the six BCS conferences and five are from Conference USA where pass defense is prohibited, so Robinson had to have some credentials to be recognized from the Sun Belt Conference.

As a freshman last year, he completed almost 64 percent of his 505 passes for 3,726 yards with 28 touchdowns and 15 interceptions.

Don’t assume Robinson feasted on Sun Belt opposition. He was 28-of-38 in a 41-38 loss to Oklahoma State, 58 percent or better against three other non-conference foes and 32-of-42 for 387 in a New Orleans Bowl victory over Ohio.

Two weeks ago, in Troy’s only game of the year, he was 24-of-42 against Clemson. Troy led the Tigers 16-13 at the half.

___________________________

The Tennessee game showed me that Bray is the real deal. I actually think that Tennesse may be the toughest game that Arkansas has at home this year. Some people would argue it is South Carolina, but I am picking Vandy to beat them this week. Miss St is very good but will they be able to recover from starting 0-2 in the SEC?

The other SEC home game for Arkansas is Auburn and with the defeat this week at Clemson it proves that Auburn will lucky to finish 4-4 in the SEC conference play this year. I think Tennessee will be a surprising dark horse in the East and probably the toughest team Arkansas will face this year at home. We will have to wait and see.

Below is a negative view of Tennessee’s game yesterday from Knoxnews.com:

Quarterbacks: B-

Tyler Bray had one of his first mistakes of the season, and it proved to be a big one. The sophomore’s interception to start the second half led directly to points and put UT in a hole it couldn’t climb out of without Justin Hunter at receiver.

Running backs: C-

Tauren Poole was a non-factor, and Marlin Lane didn’t provide much more on the ground. Lane did add another touchdown to his growing resume and was productive out of the backfield as a receiver.

Wide receivers/ tight ends: B

Losing Hunter early was a critical blow to the offense, but it did give Vincent Dallas and DeAnthony Arnett a chance to make an impact. Both got involved in the passing game and showed signs of being able to help moving forward.

Offensive line: D

There were no running lanes to be found, and James Stone struggled mightily to get the ball to Bray with his shotgun snaps. The sophomore hadn’t really shown any signs of problems through two weeks, but Bray was frequently scooping balls off the ground.

Defensive line: C-

The Vols didn’t have much time to generate much pressure on Florida quarterback John Brantley because he was so quick to dish it to his running backs. There were plenty of opportunities to wrap Chris Rainey and Jeff Demps in the backfield, but the Vols missed far too many times.

Linebackers: C-

A lot of the blame has to be placed on this group for the success of Florida’s short passing game. Rainey’s 83-yard catch-and-run came clearly as a result of busted coverage. Nevertheless, there were some highlights for this group, as both freshmen A.J. Johnson, who ran back a fumble in the third quarter, and Curt Maggitt looked very good at times.

Secondary: C

The Vols didn’t have to worry much about Brantley or Florida’s underwhelming group of wide receivers burning them for big plays, but they also share some of the blame for Rainey’s and Demps’ short catches going for long gains. There should have been someone around to slow down Rainey on his long touchdown catch. Senior Art Evans, back in the starting lineup, and Marsalis Teague were mostly reliable at cornerback, but they weren’t tested very often.

Special teams: F

What could go wrong did go wrong, and to make matters worse, there were penalties on top of that. Michael Palardy missed a short field goal in the first quarter, had a punt blocked and was woeful on kickoffs. The only facet that wasn’t a mess was the typically awful punt return team. Of course, with the way Florida was scoring, there weren’t many opportunities.

Coaching: C-

Dooley questioned his decision to go for a two-point conversion midway through the third quarter, but collectively the Vols seemed to make some adjustments on both sides of the ball that allowed them to stay competitive in a game that looked like it could get out of hand at times.

Overall: C-

The Vols were dealt some adversity early with Hunter going down, and they didn’t handle it well and struggled to get an early foothold in the game. That might not be surprising for a young team, but it showed some signs of maturing in the way it battled back late.