Friday, October 31, 2008

Alcoa's Cobb Gets First Start At QB

Former Alcoa star Randall Cobb will be the starting quarterback when the Kentucky Wildcats travel to Starkville to play Mississippi State at 2:30 EDT on Saturday.

Last year at this time, Cobb was directing the Alcoa Tornadoes to the school’s fourth consecutive state championship in 2A.

The true freshman sensation recently made the news when he decided to wear jersey No. 12 during the Arkansas game to honor wide receiver Dicky Lyons, whose University of Kentucky career ended with a knee injury in the South Carolina game.

“Dicky was my role model even before I got here,” Cobb said. “There are a lot of things that he taught me and all the wide receivers. He’s a person we look up to and can talk to about anything, not just football.”The versatile Cobb made five catches for 73 yards and two touchdowns receiving to go along with 45 yards passing wearing Lyons’ No. 12.

Nevertheless, it’s back to No. 18 and quarterback where he will start in place of Mike Hartline.
Wildcats Coach Rich Brooks decided to make changes following a 63-5 loss to Florida last week in the “Swamp.”

“Going into this game, after looking at the film, we’re going to make a few changes in the starting lineup,” Brooks said. “E.J. Adams and Gene McCaskill will start at the wide receiver. Randall Cobb will start at quarterback.”Brooks said he’ll probably reverse the action and bring Hartline in at some point in the second or third quarter.

The veteran coach said Hartline has done a lot of good things, but the offense has been getting off to a slow start. “When Randall (Cobb) is inserted, we seem at least to be able to move the ball,” Brooks said. “I think (Cobb) gives the defense a little more problem with his feet and his ability to improvise than Mike does. He (Cobb) is starting to understand the offense a lot better.”
The Kentucky fans have been cheering for Cobb to take over as the Wilcats No. 1 field general.

“Mike Hartline has been doing a good job of leadership,” Brooks said. “ He is a positive guy. Randall, as I’ve said many times, is mature beyond his years. The best way for somebody to show leadership is to go out and play well and then act like a leader after they’ve done it. I think both Mike and Randall have done that at different times. We just think Randall could give us a little spark and a little diversity in what we’re able to do on offense.”

Cobb has completed 18 of 33 passes for 214 yards and one touchdown.

He has ran for 129 yards on 23 attempts and scored two TDs.

Vols Fighting Through Injuries; Vinson Suspended

Tennessee head coach Phillip Fulmer offered a positive injury report after Thursday's 90-minute workout at Haslam Field, where the Vols concluded final preparations for Saturday's SEC encounter at South Carolina.

Last weekend against Alabama, UT suffered notable injuries to defensive tackle Dan Williams (knee), defensive end Wes Brown (knee), and linebackers Ellix Wilson (ankle) and LaMarcus Thompson (ankle). In addition, offensive tackle Anthony Parker (ankle) and defensive tackle Walter Fisher (toe) were limited and wide receiver Gerald Jones (ankle) did not play.
But Fulmer said the outlook for the group as a whole might not be so sour.

"Actually, the guys are doing well. Dan Williams looks like he might be able to play -- I wouldn't have said that at all on Monday. Walter Fisher is a week better and hopefully we are going to get some help from him. I think Wes Brown will definitely play. Gerald (Jones) is not 100 percent, but he is probable. I certainly wouldn't put him out there if I didn't think he could protect himself, but hopefully he'll be a day or two better (by Saturday).

"We've had three really tough SEC games in a row, but we're moving right along. Better than I thought."

Tennessee (3-5, 1-4 SEC) has four games remaining in its race for bowl eligibility. After facing South Carolina (5-3, 2-3), the Vols host Wyoming (2-6), travel to Vanderbilt (5-3, 3-2) and host Kentucky (5-3, 1-3).

Fulmer also announced that sophomore defensive back Brent Vinson (13) has been suspended for this weekend's game for violation of team rules.

SATURDAY'S VOL NETWORK 'STADIUMCAST' SET FOR FM 92.7
The Vol Network's "StadiumCast" frequency for Tennessee's game versus South Carolina at Williams-Brice Stadium on Saturday will be 92.7 on the FM dial. Fans attending the game can tune into the Vol Network broadcast by bringing a portable radio. The "Kickoff Call-In Show" begins Vol Network coverage at 5:30 p.m. Eastern time (4:30 p.m. Central).

SELECT SINGLE GAME UT FOOTBALL TICKETS AVAILABLE
Individual game tickets for both remaining University of Tennessee home football contests are available for purchase online at utsports.com, via phone at (800) 332-VOLS and at Thompson-Boling Arena.
Tennessee hosts Wyoming for Homecoming 2008 on Nov. 8. Kickoff is set for 1 p.m. and, with no national or regional broadcast of the game, VideoSeat pay-per-view is providing the telecast. Kentucky visits for the regular season finale on Nov. 29.
Tickets for Wyoming are $40 each plus shipping and handling. Tickets for Kentucky are $50 each plus shipping and handling.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Georgia's Darryl Gamble Named Bronko Nagurski Player of the Week

DALLAS (FWAA) - Georgia linebacker Darryl Gamble has been named the FWAA/Bronko Nagurski National Defensive Player of the Week for games of the weekend of Oct. 25.

Gamble, a 6-2, 237-pound sophomore from Bainbridge, Ga., tied a Southeastern Conference record when he returned two interceptions for touchdowns in Georgia's 52-38 victory at LSU.

Gamble, who also had a career-high 13 tackles, had 93 yards in returns on the interceptions. His first pick was on the game's first play from of scrimmage and gave the Bulldog's a 7-0 lead with 14:40 left in the first quarter.

Gamble will be added to the 2008 Bronko Nagurski Trophy Watch List. The Bronko Nagurski Trophy will be presented to the best defensive player in college football on Dec. 7 by the FWAA and the Charlotte Touchdown Club at the Westin Hotel in Charlotte, N.C. Five finalists for the Nagurski Trophy will be announced on Nov. 17.

Each week during the 2008 season the FWAA All-America Committee will select a national defensive player of the week from nominations made by the 11 Division I Bowl Subdivision Conferences and major independents.

Last season, LSU tackle Glenn Dorsey won the coveted Bronko Nagurski Trophy during the 13th season the FWAA has named a national defensive player of the year.

The Football Writers Association of America, a non-profit organization founded in 1941, consists of more than 1,000 men and women across North America who cover college football for a living. The membership includes journalists, broadcasters and publicists, as well as key executives in all the areas that involve the game. The FWAA works to govern areas that include game day operations, major awards, a national poll and its annual All-America team.

The Charlotte Touchdown Club is a non-profit organization founded in 1990 for the purpose of promoting high school, collegiate, and professional football in the Charlotte, N.C., region. The club's activities and services focus community attention on the outstanding citizenship, scholarship, sportsmanship, and leadership of area athletes and coaches. For more information, contact John Rocco (704-347-2918 or jrocco@touchdownclub.com). The official website of the Charlotte Touchdown Club is www.touchdownclub.com.

For more information on the Bronko Nagurski Trophy, contact FWAA executive director Steve Richardson (972-713-6198 or tigerfwaa@aol.com).

2008 Bronko Nagurski National Defensive Players of the Week·
Weekend of Aug. 30: Ben Owens, Arkansas State·
Weekend of Sept. 6: Patrick Benoist, Vanderbilt·
Weekend of Sept. 13: DeAndre Levy, Wisconsin·
Weekend of Sept. 20: Ryan Hamilton, Vanderbilt·
Weekend of Sept. 27: Trimane Goddard, North Carolina·
Weekend of Oct. 4: Scott McKillop, Pittsburgh·
Weekend of Oct. 11: Tyrrell Herbert, Toledo·
Weekend of Oct. 18: Jerry Hughes, TCU·
Weekend of Oct. 25: Darryl Gamble, Georgia

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Stafford, Tebow and Wilson O'Brien Semifinalists



2008 O'Brien Semifinalists
Sam Bradford SO Oklahoma Big 12
Daryll Clark JR Penn State Big Ten
Chase Daniel SR Missouri Big 12
Max Hall JR BYU MWC
Graham Harrell SR Texas Tech Big 12 David Johnson SR Tulsa C-USA
Colt McCoy JR Texas Big 12
Todd Reesing JR Kansas Big 12
Zac Robinson JR Oklahoma St Big 12
Mark Sanchez JR USC Pac-10
Matthew Stafford JR Georgia SEC
Tim Tebow JR Florida SEC
John Parker Wilson SR Alabama SEC

"These candidates represent a high level of talent from coast to coast," said Danielle Moorman, executive director of the Davey O'Brien Foundation. "The O'Brien is proud to highlight these young men, not only for their elite quarterback skills, but for their qualities of character and leadership that the award is committed to honoring."

Semifinalists were selected by The O'Brien Selection Committee, comprised of journalists, broadcasters, commentators and former winners, as well as fans across the country with the top three quarterbacks from The O'Brien Fan Vote being added to the list. The Selection Committee is asked to evaluate each candidate on his quarterback skills, athletic ability, academics, character, leadership, sportsmanship and reputation as a team player. For a complete listing of O'Brien Selection Committee members,
click here.

These 13 Semifinalists will contend for the award until the list is narrowed to three Finalists on November 24. All Finalists will be in attendance in Orlando, Fla., where The O'Brien Winner will be announced during The Home Depot ESPNU College Football Awards Show airing December 11. The recipient will be honored February 16, 2009, at the 32nd Annual O'Brien Awards Dinner at The Fort Worth Club in Fort Worth, Texas.

Fans are able to vote for Semifinalist candidates once daily at http://rs6.net/tn.jsp?e=001CFrW4kTQVyWfEp8Gsa9O5vdQEDyfsNqbDExpswZ7yC0xAW1CsZN8JKDRkKglm-A7_-Ur55BiJ61cZW9jEkxe64of8JeKH3Rt_QhZRz6quojWGZLNer_l6w==. The voting will continue throughout the Semifinalist and Finalist rounds with 5% of the final tally coming directly from the Fan Vote.

About The Davey O'Brien National Quarterback Award®
The O'Brien honors the nation's best college quarterback of the year and inspires student-athletes to triumph both on and off the field. By recognizing and honoring athletes who excel in both sports and academics while exhibiting strong character and leadership, The O'Brien aims to help instill a lifelong moral fiber in each candidate. The O'Brien is overseen by the Davey O'Brien Foundation, which was founded in 1977 and is headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas. The Foundation has given away more than $750,000 in scholarships and university grants to help high school and college athletes transform leadership on the field into leadership in life.
American Airlines is the official travel partner of The O'Brien.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Vols Turn Attention To South Carolina

The Tennessee football team returned to practice Sunday with a light workout inside Neyland-Thompson Sports Center.

The Vols fell to 3-5 overall and 1-4 in the Southeastern Conference with Saturday's 29-9 loss to Alabama, but there remain four games on the schedule for Phillip Fulmer and his charges to orchestrate a turnaround.

In order to do that, each opponent must be taken one at a time, and the first one is South Carolina.

"You have to give credit to this team for how hard they've played," Fulmer said. "They continue to play extremely hard. Right now, we're only worried about South Carolina. That's our goal, to lay a foundation for the next season. We can't be champions this year, but we sure as heck can have the heart of a champion and continue to improve. Those were the two things I asked them to do:?continue to improve and be accountable."

One area where Fulmer said the Vols need to be more accountable is in the Orange Zone. The Vols have scored just 13 touchdowns in 27 trips this season.

"When you get inside you like to have a big, tall receiver who can go up and get it," Fulmer said. "If not, you have to find a way to get it done. These guys were good enough to win 10 games last year and played really well. We may not be able to throw the fade, but we can throw the screen underneath like (Josh) Briscoe caught last night."

The Vols will have Orange Zone improvement as one of their areas of focus this week before heading to Columbia, S.C., for their 27th all-time meeting with the Gamecocks. Tennessee owns a 21-3-2 advantage in the series and has not lost in Columbia since 1992.

ESPN2 is televising the game nationally. Kickoff is set for Saturday at 7 p.m. ET.

www.utsports.com

Monday, October 27, 2008

SEC NOTEBOOK: Oct. 27

Four Southeastern Conference teams are ranked in all major polls and in the BCS Standings this week.

Here are Sunday SEC notes and poll updates.

Alabama, the only undefeated team in the Southeastern Conference (8-0 overall and 5-0 in conference games) leads four SEC teams that are ranked in this week's three major polls (Associated Press, Coaches USA Today, Harris) and in the BCS Rankings. Bama is ranked second across the board.
Georgia is eighth in the AP and USA Today polls, eighth in the Harris and sixth in BCS.
Florida is ranked fifth in the AP, 7th in USA Today, ninth in Harris and eighth in BCS.
LSU is ranked 15th in AP and USA Today, 16th in Harris, and 19th in BCS.
Texas is number one in all polls and Penn State third.
The big news in the SEC this week is that Florida and Georgia at playing in Jacksonville. The two teams with the winningest records in the SEC since 1998 face each other this Saturday when Georgia (7-1, 4-1 SEC) and Florida (6-1, 4-1) get together. Kickoff is slated for 3:30 p.m. ET on CBS Sports.

Georgia has the league's best mark since 1998 at 104-31 (.770) while Florida is second at 99-35 (.739).

Other conference games this Saturday include Tennessee (3-5, 1-4) visiting South Carolina (5-3, 2-3) on ESPN2 at 7 p.m. ET, Ole Miss (4-4, 2-3) hosting Auburn (4-4, 2-3) on Raycom Sports at 11:30 a.m. CT and Mississippi State (3-5, 1-3) hosting Kentucky (5-3, 1-3) at 1:30 p.m. CT. Alabama will host Arkansas State at 2 p.m. CDT Sunday in Bama's homecoming game.

Two other non-conference tilts are also on the schedule for Saturday when Arkansas (3-5, 1-4) hosts Tulsa (7-0 and playing Central Florida Sunday night) at 1 p.m. CT and LSU (5-2, 3-2) hosts Tulane (2-5) at 7 p.m. CT. The SEC continues to lead the nation in non-conference winning percentage at 80.0 percent (28-7).

The SEC has won at least 75 percent of its non-conference games every year since 2005. In 54 home games, SEC stadiums have been filled to 98.59 percent capacity. More than 4.1 million fans have watched SEC football in person this year, an average of 77,430 per home game.
Alabama coach Nick Saban has reached the top 25 in total wins at SEC schools with the Tide's 29-9 win at Tennessee. Saban is 63-22 (74.1 percent) combined during his tenures at Alabama and LSU. His 63 wins ranks 25th all-time. Five current SEC coaches are in the top 25. Another note on Florida-Georgia, the two starting quarterbacks are a combined 40-10 in their careers.
UF's Tim Tebow is 15-5 as a starting quarterback and Georgia's Matthew Stafford is 25-5. Combined in the 40 wins, the two quarterbacks have thrown 68 touchdown passes and 22 interceptions. Combined in the 10 losses, the two signal callers have thrown 13 touchdowns and 10 interceptions.
LSU senior defensive end Kirston Pittman is this week's SEC Community Service Team Player of the Week and will be featured on Raycom Sports' telecast of the Auburn at Ole Miss game.
Florida's streak of 250 consecutive games without being shutout is now the second longest active streak in NCAA FBS behind only Michigan (296). Tennessee is the SEC's second highest active streak at 179 games.

More Georgia-Florida: When these two teams lose, it is usually by a close margin. In Georgia's 15 losses since 2003, 10 have been by a touchdown or less, the highest percentage of close losses in the SEC (66.7) during that time. Florida is second in that category with 12 of 19 losses since 2003 being by a touchdown or less (63.2). The Georgia-Florida rivalry since 2000 is also the sixth closest margin in the SEC during that time. In the eight meetings since 2000, the average winning margin is 8.13 points per game.
LSU's Colt David became his schools' career scoring leader last week against Georgia. The senior has 324 career points which is also eighth in SEC history. He is only two points behind sixth in conference annals. His 180 PATs is second in SEC history, just eight behind Jeff Hall's (Tennessee) 188 career PATs.
Mississippi State's Derek Pegues became the SEC's career kickoff return yardage leader against Middle Tennessee. Pegues has accumulated 2,321 yards on 104 kickoff return yards, surpassing Kentucky's Derek Abney (2,315 yards). Pegues is also fourth in SEC history in combined kickoff/punt return yards with 3,078 yards.

The average SEC game this season is lasting 3:11, which is three minutes below the national average (3:14).
SEC teams saw its offensive numbers surge this past weekend. There were 9.00 average scores in the seven games this past weekend, the second highest number of the season (Week 5 - 9.14).
The top four productive offenses in the SEC by efficiency are ranked in the AP and USA Today Top 25 this week.
In overall drive efficiency (TDs & FGs divided into number of drives), Florida leads the SEC at 51.90 percent (32 TDs, 9 FGs, 79 drives), while Georgia is second at 44.68 (30 TDs, 12 FGs, 94 drives), Alabama third at 40.62 (26 TDs, 13 FGs, 96 drives) and LSU fourth at 39.36 (27 TDs, 10 FGs, 94 drives). Ole Miss is fifth at 36.46 percent (23 TDs, 12 FGs, 96 drives).

Home teams are 16-13 (55.2 percent) in SEC intra-conference games this season. Alabama (3-0), Florida (2-0), Georgia (2-0) remain perfect on the road this season in SEC games.
SEC intra-conference games remain among the most competitive in the nation. In 29 intra-conference games, 19 have been decided by 10 points or less (65.5 percent), the second highest percentage among NCAA FBS conferences in the nation.
The average scoring margin in SEC intra-conference games is 12.17 points per game, third among NCAA FBS conferences.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Phil Fulmer Says He Loves This Week

Tennessee head coach Phillip Fulmer says rivalry weeks don't come any bigger than UT-Alabama.

"This game has always been special to both teams, Alabama and Tennessee," Fulmer said. "I've been fortunate to be a part of a lot of them and I just love this week."

Often referred to as "The Third Saturday in October," this rivalry was played exclusively on that date from 1928-94; since then and counting this season, it's happened only five times in the last 14 years. The two storied programs are getting together in football for the 91st time overall and the 80th consecutive season (neither school fielded a team in 1943).

Kickoff is set for 7:45 p.m. Eastern time at Neyland Stadium, with the Vol Network and ESPN carrying the action. Home teams have won the last four meetings.

Thursday, UT (3-4, 1-3 SEC) wrapped up its final full practice preparations with a 90-minute workout at Haslam Field.

"We certainly had a very attentive Thursday practice," Fulmer said. "Now we need to make sure that attention carries over to the football game. Alabama (7-0, 4-0 SEC) is a very fine team. They've done a good job of rushing the football and playing the run statistically, and then you watch them on film and it's quite impressive.

"Their big-play ability, a solid kicking game -- you're really looking at an outstanding football team all the way around. It will take a heck of an effort on our part to win, and we're expecting to get that from our team. We'll have to have the fight, the toughness and all those things it takes to play in this game."

Regarding injuries, Fulmer said both wide receiver Gerald Jones and offensive lineman Anthony Parker remain questionable and are game-time decisions.

"To play on the offensive line and play at receiver with an ankle in a game like this would be very difficult. Both of them got a little bit of work today and we'll see how much progress they make in the next couple of days."


Fulmer thinks defensive tackle Walter Fisher should be able to contribute.
"He did a little bit today. A turf toe's tough but I expect him to play."


www.utsports.com

Berry Named To Sporting News Today Midseason All-American Team

Tennessee safety Eric Berry was named to Sporting News Today's inaugural Midseason All-
American Team, released Friday.
"No wonder the Vols are considering using Berry on offense and special teams," Sporting News Today's Dave Curtis said. "His coverage and ball skills, and knack for scoring touchdowns, are second-to-none among defenders."
Berry was one of seven SEC players honored. No conference had as many.
The All-American team:
Offense
QB Colt McCoy, Texas
RB Javon Ringer, Michigan State
RB Shonn Greene, Iowa
WR Dez Bryant, Oklahoma State
WR Eric Decker, Minnesota
TE Chase Coffman, Missouri
OL Andre Smith, Alabama
OL Michael Oher, Mississippi
OL Duke Robinson, Oklahoma
OL Alex Mack, California
OL Herman Johnson, LSU
K Louie Sakoda, Utah
KR Derrick Williams, Penn State

Defense
DE Brian Orakpo, Texas
DE Jerry Hughes, TCU
DT Terrence Cody, Alabama
DT Fili Moala, USC
LB Rennie Curran, Georgia
LB Scott McKillop, Pittsburgh
LB James Laurinaitis, Ohio State
CB Malcolm Jenkins, Ohio State
CB Alphonso Smith, Wake Forest
S Eric Berry, Tennessee
S Kevin Ellison, USC
P Kevin Huber, Cincinnati
PR Brandon James, Florida

Sporting News Today is the world's first digital daily sports newspaper. To sign up for the free publication, go to sportingnewstoday.com.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Vols Want To Play Like It's Practice

"We've got to take it to the field."

Tennessee head coach Phillip Fulmer offered those words Wednesday after assessing his team's 90-minute workout at Haslam Field. The Vols have gone to more physical practice sessions since reaching the season's halfway point with a 2-4 record.
UT responded last Saturday by defeating Mississippi State 34-3, but second-ranked Alabama looms with a whole different set of circumstances -- and opportunities -- this weekend at Neyland Stadium. To that end, the Vols have kept up their mid-week intensity.

"Practices are all good, but we've got to take it to the field," Fulmer said.
"We've had two good physical days of work. Mentally, we have been very into our preparations. Now it's important for us to come out and have one of those perfect Thursdays where you come away from practice feeling really good about (your work)."

The Vols won last weekend's turnover battle 3-0 and committed only penalty. To show how things had gone over the first six contests, Tennessee still ranks 10th in the SEC in penalty yards at 57.1 per game.

"We certainly understand the challenges we have," Fulmer said. "I really appreciate the way the coaches and particularly the players have gone about their preparations for this football game."

BERRY'S ACCOLADES CONTINUE

Eric Berry capped a terrific few days Wednesday by being named CAREacter Star Athlete of the Week. The CAREacter Star Athlete Program is based on a five-point "star system" that includes the basic traits of a true champion, whether on or off the field. Those traits are attitude, character, grades, community service and performance.

Berry set an SEC record Saturday for career interception returns yards and, for his efforts, was named Lott Trophy IMPACT Player of the Week. The award is the first in college football to equally recognize athletic performance and the personal character attributes of the player. A check in the amount of $1,000 is being sent to UT's general scholarship fund from the Lott Trophy presented by Wachovia.

www.utsports.com

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Fulmer's Press Conference Comments

TENNESSEE HEAD COACH Phillip Fulmer's MEDIA DAY COMMENTS"To me this is one of the best rivalries in all of college football. I've been really blessed to be a part of it as a player, as an assistant coach and now 17 years as a head football coach. As I do typically, I talked to the players about the history of this game and the great players and great games that have taken place over the years. Certainly, this year the Alabama football team is deserving of its No. 2 ranking, not only because of its play during the course of the year, but how they've played. They've played disciplined, tough football on both sides of the ball and taken care of the football.

"When you look at them from a defensive standpoint, their front stands out. They've played exceptional up front at defensive tackle and defensive end. They have one really young linebacker and another that is a sophomore that has started for a long time; they've played exceptionally well for them. Their secondary (presents) a lot of problems. They're very athletic and they give you lots of different kinds of looks. It is a real challenge for our football team to build on what we did last week against Mississippi State.

"Their offense starts with the run. They do an exceptional job of mixing it up with different styles of run. Their backs and line are outstanding, and they make a lot of good things happen for them. With that they have the big-play potential at wide receiver, and I think John Parker Wilson is one of the better quarterbacks in the league as far as getting the ball where it's supposed to be on time. Again, it's a real challenge for our football team.

"They have a real solid kicking game all the way around, whether it is returning or coverage. There are no obvious issues they should be concerned with their football team. We absolutely must play well in this ballgame. Building on last Saturday means no turnovers, takeaways, penalty discipline. All of those things, when you play in the Southeastern Conference, you have to do those things.

"Our challenge is to get to the practice field and pick up where we left off last week. I thought our work was good, and really for the first time this year it completely carried over into the game with our physicalness and being able to run the ball.

"I know we have to come out of this week with a great understanding of how we win this game vs. Alabama coming from the practice field. Our quarterback play--I've been pleased with Nick (Stephens) for a first-time starter--I think he has had enough games now under his belt. His game management has been good, but there's another step that he can make, and you see progress being made.

"Our offensive line last week was very effective, not that they hadn't been before. After coming off the Georgia game and only running it 11 times, they certainly took the challenge as did our tailbacks.



"In this game, we'll have to have a wide receiver somewhere make a play for us or a tailback make a play for us. It's really difficult against anybody to take the ball eight, 10, 12 or 14 plays and drive for scores. It's particularly difficult versus a team like Alabama, who gives you so many problems. We'll be looking for that play somewhere along the way, and we've been able to make that since Nick has been our quarterback.

"I'm really glad to have Britton (Colquitt) back out there. He certainly made a difference in the field-position game for us. Daniel Lincoln and Chad Cunningham have a real challenge ahead to make a real difference in this game from a kicking standpoint.

"I know our team will be excited to play this game. I know as a staff we're excited to get to work today and go to work on this Alabama team. This is why you coach or go to a place like Tennessee or Alabama, to play in these kinds of games.

We're looking forward to it."

Berry Named Lott Player of the Week

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. - Tennessee's sensational sophomore Safety Eric Berry has been named the winner of The Lott Trophy IMPACT Player of the Week presented by Wachovia.

Berry (5-11, 195, Fairburn, Ga.) had a career high 10 tackles, including one sack and his fifth interception of the season, returning it 72 yards for a touchdown, in the Volunteers' 34-3 win over Mississippi State. Berry now has 397 yards in interception return yards, breaking a 60-year Southeastern Conference record.

Tennessee will receive $1,000 for its general scholarship fund in recognition of Berry's performance.

Berry was selected by The Legends Football Coaches Association. Former Georgia Coach Vince Dooley, a member of the Legends Coaches, said, "Eric Berry played a heck of a game against Mississippi State. His fourth quarter interception that he ran back for a touchdown not only broke the game open, but it so rattled the Mississippi State quarterback that he threw another interception for a touchdown three plays later."

Tennessee Coach Philip Fulmer said, "When you put him (Berry) in the category of players here at other positions, he's in the Peyton Manning or Jamal Lewis category."
Berry, who leads the country in interceptions, also was selected Southeastern Conference Defensive Player of the Week.

Named after Hall of Famer Ronnie Lott, The Lott Trophy is awarded to college football's Defensive IMPACT Player of the Year. Now in its fifth year, The Lott Trophy is the first college football award to equally recognize athletic performance and the personal character attributes of the player.

Sponsored by The Pacific Club IMPACT Foundation in Newport Beach, the award is given to a player who exhibits the same characteristics Lott embodied during his distinguished career: Integrity, Maturity, Performance, Academics, Community and Tenacity.

David Pollack of Georgia won the initial Lott Trophy in 2004. DeMeco Ryans of Alabama won the award in 2005. Daymeion Hughes of California was the recipient in 2006 and Glenn Dorsey of LSU in 2007. Georgia, Alabama, Cal and LSU each received $25,000 for their general scholarship funds. In four years, the Pacific Club IMPACT Foundation has donated more than $450,000 to various charities, including the four universities.

Voters for the award include selected members of the national media, previous finalists, the Board of Directors of the Pacific Club IMPACT Foundation, The IMPACT Foundation Board of Advisers comprised of many retired NFL players and the Legends Coaches, a distinguished group of former head college coaches.

Other players receiving consideration from the Legends Coaches this week were Malcolm Jenkins and James Laurinaitis of Ohio State, Mark Herzlich of Boston College and Scott McKillop of Pittsburgh.

The 2008 Lott Trophy IMPACT Players of the Week
Week I - Alterraun Verner, CB, UCLA
Week II - Zack Follett, LB, California
Week III - George Selvie, DE, South Florida
Week IV - Aaron Curry, LB, Wake Forest
Week V - Brian Orakpo, DE, Texas
Week VI - Scott McKillop, LB, Pittsburgh
Week VII - Brian Orakpo, DE, Texas
Week VIII - Eric Berry, S, Tennessee

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

SEC Football Players of the Week Announced

SEC OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK

KNOWSHON MORENO Tailback GEORGIA 5-11 • 207 • Sophomore Belford, N.J. (Middletown South HS)
· Moreno recorded a season-high 172 yards rushing and one touchdown on 23 carries in Georgia's 24-14 win over Vanderbilt.
· The effort was Moreno's 10th 100-yard game of his career. He is currently 10th in the Georgia career record books in rushing yards with 2,096.
· He also had one catch for 10 yards against Vanderbilt.
· Moreno is the SEC's leading scorer (9.43 points per game) while Georgia leads the SEC in total offense (429.6 yards per game).

SEC DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK ERIC BERRY Safety TENNESSEE 5-11 • 195 • Sophomore Fairburn, Ga. (Creekside HS)
· Berry had a season-high 10 tackles, a sack and returned an interception for a touchdown in Tennessee's 34-3 win against Mississippi State.
· Berry's 72-yard interception return for a touchdown was his fifth interception of the season and 10th of his career. His 397 career interception yards broke a 60-year old SEC record held by Ole Miss' Bobby Wilson (1946-49, 379 yards).
· With his five interceptions this season, Berry leads the nation in interceptions.
· Berry has intercepted a pass in each of the last three games.

SEC SPECIAL TEAMS PLAYER OF THE WEEK BRETT UPSON Punter VANDERBILT 5-11 • 185 • Junior Griffin, Ga. (Spalding HS)
· Upson averaged 44.6 yards on seven punts in Vanderbilt's 24-14 loss at Georgia.
· On Upson's seven punts, Georgia was pinned inside its own 5-yard line twice. The Bulldogs also had no punt return yardage against the Commodores.
· One of his seven punts was a touchback and the average field position for Georgia on the punts was its own 20-yard line.
· Upson is averaging 40.8 yards per punt this season and his 38.3 net punting average leads the SEC.

SEC OFFENSIVE LINEMAN OF THE WEEK MIKE JOHNSON Guard ALABAMA 6-6 • 299 • Junior Pensacola, Fla. (Pine Forest HS)
· Johnson did not allow a sack or quarterback pressure and did not have any missed assignments in Alabama's 24-20 win against Ole Miss.
· Alabama finished the game with 326 total yards (219 passing, 107 rushing) in the win. 219 of those yards came in the first half as the Tide opened up a 24-3 lead.
· The honor for Johnson is his second of the season (Week 1) and the third of the year for an Alabama offensive lineman (Andre Smith, Week 4).

SEC DEFENSIVE LINEMAN OF THE WEEK TYSON JACKSON Defensive End LSU 6-5 • 290 • Senior Edgard, La. (West St. John HS)
· Jackson had three tackles, including a pair of sacks, in LSU's 24-17 win at South Carolina.
· The Tiger defensive line limited the Gamecocks to just 39 yards rushing in the game. Carolina had 254 yards of total offense with just 42 in the second half.
· LSU finished the game with a season-high six sacks.
· His two sacks raised his career total to 18.5, which is the eighth highest in LSU history. Jackson is the current active sack leader in the SEC.

SEC FRESHMAN OF THE WEEK RANDALL COBB Wide Receiver / Quarterback / Punt Returner KENTUCKY 5-11 • 185 Alcoa, Tenn. (HS)
· Cobb scored both of Kentucky's touchdowns in the final 4:15 of the game to rally the Wildcats to a 21-20 win against Arkansas.
· He accounted for every yard in UK's winning touchdown drive, beginning with a 14-yard punt return, and then catching passes for 14 and 21 yards (TD). His first TD catch was a 32-yarder.
· For the game, he had five receptions for 73 yards, returned three punts for 24 yards and completed 2-of-3 passes for 45 yards.

OTHER OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCES FROM WEEK 8
SAF RASHAD JOHNSON (Alabama) -- Led Tide with nine tackles (6 solos) with an interception, forced fumble and tackle for loss, against Ole Miss.
TB MICHAEL SMITH (Arkansas) -- Rushed for career-high 192 yards and one touchdown on career-high 35 carries and had three catches for 33 yards and another score against Kentucky.
FL A.J. GREEN (Georgia) -- Freshman caught game-high seven passes for 132 yards and a touchdown against Vanderbilt.
LB MICAH JOHNSON (Kentucky) -- Notched career-high 15 tackles with two for losses, including a sack, and a pass deflection, against Arkansas.
LT CIRON BLACK (LSU) -- Led Tigers with nine knockdown blocks, did not allow a sack, and played all 75 snaps from scrimmage against South Carolina.
DT PERIA JERRY (Ole Miss) -- Credited with seven tackles, 2.5 for losses, including a sack, and had a forced fumble against Alabama.
DB ZACH SMITH (Mississippi State) -- Had game-high 11 tackles (seven solos) against Tennessee.
LB ERIC NORWOOD (South Carolina) -- Registered eight total tackles (four solos), with 1.5 for losses, and a pass deflection.
RB LENNON CREER (Tennessee) -- Rushed for game-high 68 yards on 17 carries and a touchdown and also had a pass reception against Mississippi State.
RB JARED HAWKINS (Vanderbilt) -- Rushed for 63 yards on 13 carries and also had three catches for 23 yards against Georgia.

Tennessee/Alabama Series History & Notes

Alabama leads the all-time series with the Vols 45-38-7.

The series is knotted at 20-20-1 in Knoxville, and Phillip Fulmer boasts a 11-4 record over the Crimson Tide dating to the 1993 season, including seven-straight from 1995-2001.

The series has bounced back-and-forth recently after being full of streaks through much of the 1970s, 80s and 90s. Tennessee won in 2003, 2004 and 2006, while Alabama claimed victories in 2002, 2005 and 2007. Prior to their win streak from 1995-01, the Vols did not capture a win in nine tries dating to 1986. Tennessee won four-straight from 1982-85, and Alabama won 11-straight from 1971-81.

Three Vols hail from the state of Alabama--Carson Anderson (Florence), Wes Brown (Athens), and Willie Bohannon (Mobile). Brown has started all seven games for the Vols at defensive end and has posted 22 tackles and three TFLs.

Tide linebacker's coach Kevin Steele played for Tennessee under Johnny Majors from 1978-79 and stayed on as a student coach in 1980 and a graduate assistant coach in 1981. He coached the outside linebackers in 1982, and then after stints at New Mexico State and Oklahoma State, returned to Knoxville to serve as UT's defensive backs coach from 1987-88.

MISSISSIPPI STATE WIN PUTS TENNESSEE IN ELITE COMPANY
Tennessee's 34-3 win over Mississippi State was Phillip Fulmer's 150th triumph as Tennessee's head coach, allowing him to join Gen. Robert R. Neyland (173) as just the second Vols coach to reach that victory plateau. UT stands alongside Michigan as the only schools with two different coaches owning 150-plus victories at their respective school. Bo Schembechler (194) and Fielding Yost (165) passed the 150-win mark during their tenures for the Wolverines.
Tennessee also is one of just five schools with three different coaches owning at least 100 victories in the program, Johnny Majors having captured 116 wins during his Vols career. Other schools are Oklahoma with four different coaches and Southern California, Georgia Tech and Michigan with three apiece.

VOLS TIED FOR FIRST NATIONALLY WITH 14 INTERCEPTIONS
Through eight weeks of NCAA play, Tennessee ranks tied for first nationally among FBS teams and first in the SEC with 14 interceptions. The Vols are averaging two interceptions per game and 22.7 yards per return.

Seven different Vols have recorded picks thus far, but sophomore safety Eric Berry and senior cornerback DeAngelo Willingham lead the way with five and three interceptions, respectively.
BERRY NEW SEC CAREER LEADER IN INTERCEPTION RETURN YARDS
Tennessee strong safety Eric Berry continues to tear up record books, but last week he moved on from the Tennessee book to the Southeastern Conference book. His 72-yard interception return for a touchdown vs. Mississippi State gave him 397 career interception return yards, which was good enough to claim the top spot in the SEC record book from Bobby Wilson of Mississippi. He is now just 122 yards from the NCAA record held by Terrell Buckley of Florida State.

His record-breaking return vs. the Bulldogs helped earn him SEC Defensive Player of the Week honors. It was his 10th career pick and his fifth of the season. He has returned two for touchdowns, with the first one coming on a 96-yard return at Florida in 2007.
Berry has also now picked off a pass in three-straight games, making him the first UT player to do so since Jonathan Hefney during the 2006 season.

THREE MEMORABLE VOL PERFORMANCES vs. ALABAMA
In Tennessee's 90 previous clashes with Alabama, there have been many memorable individual Vol performances.

Here are three of note:
SAVING THE BEST FOR LAST: Casey Clausen, 2003 Casey Clausen led the Vols to an epic five-overtime victory against the Alabama Crimson Tide in Tuscaloosa on Oct. 25, 2003. Clausen led the Vols on an 86-yard drive in the final two minutes to tie the game at 20. He went 7-of-9 on the drive, which ended in a 1-yard touchdown pass to Troy Flemming with 25 seconds left in regulation. Then in the fifth overtime, Clausen scored the game-winner on a quarterback sneak, giving the Vols a 51-43 victory.
GRAHAM CRACKS THE TIDE: JAY GRAHAM, 1996 Jay Graham ran the ball 14 times for 128 yards and two touchdowns as the Vols defeated Alabama 20-13 in Knoxville. The first of Graham's touchdowns came on a 5-yard run with 9:41 remaining in the fourth quarter and tied the score at 13. He then scored the game-winning touchdown on a 79-yard run to put the Vols ahead 20-13 with 2:17 left in the game. The run was his career-long, passing his previous long run, a 75-yarder for a score in 1995, also against Alabama. It was Grahams' 13th 100-yard game in his career, and the second time that he eclipsed the century mark that season.

JONESING FOR A PICK: DALE JONES, 1985 In the final moments of the Vols' 16-14 victory over the Crimson Tide in Birmingham on Oct. 19, 1985, Dale Jones made the play that sealed the win, intercepting a Mike Shula pass at midfield after the Tide had scored a touchdown with 11:16 left and appeared to have momentum on their side. Jones finished the game with seven total tackles, a forced rumble, fumble recovery and the interception.

STEPHENS A DEVELOPING DEEP BALL THREAT
Sophomore quarterback Nick Stephens is just three starts into his collegiate career, but he has already started to develop an identity as a threat with the deep pass. In three starts this season, 17 of Stephens' 33 completions have been for more than 10 yards and eight of those have been for more than 20 yards.

He has completions of 43, 45, 52 and 60 yards to his credit as well.
At Georgia, seven of his 13 completions went for 15 yards or more, and vs. Northern Illinois two of 10 completions went for more than 40 yards. He also connected on a 42-yard bomb as the backup vs. UAB.

VOLUNTEERS APPROACHING 775th ALL-TIME VICTORY
One of the winningest college football teams in America, Tennessee is just one win shy of notching its 775th all-time victory.

Since the program's inception in 1891, UT has recorded 774 total victories. The Volunteers will become the ninth team ever (and second SEC team) to reach the 775-win milestone.
AYERS GETTING STRONGER AS SEASON ROLLS ON
Senior defensive end Robert Ayers has come on strong for the UT defense in the last two games. He was named a permanent team captain before the Mississippi State game and responded with his first sack of the season. He was named a game captain at Georgia Oct. 11, and the Clio, S.C., native enjoyed a career day between the hedges.
Ayers logged a career-high nine tackles against the Bulldogs, including a career-high 3.5 TFL. That marks the most TFL in a single-game since current San Francisco 49ers linebacker Parys Haralson recorded four against Kentucky in 2005.

Ayers also nabbed his first career interception last Saturday at Georgia, stopping a Bulldogs drive in the red zone. That takeaway led to a Tennessee touchdown.
Ayers led the Vols last season with 12 TFL, and his eight TFL this year lead the team and give him 24 for his career for a net loss of 91 yards.

WILSON LEADING SEC IN TACKLES
Senior linebacker Ellix Wilson leads the Southeastern Conference in tackles with 9.3 per game this season (56 in six games played).
After sitting out the Northern Illinois game Oct. 4 due to an injury, he returned at Georgia to log a career-high 16 tackles (he had 11 stops at the half). He followed that performance up with five tackles vs. Mississippi State.
His performance vs. Georgia put him over the 100-tackle milestone for his career.

www.utsports.com

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

'Dogs vs. 'Dores Preview

Vandy at Georgia

12:30 p.m. ET
Athens, Ga. Sanford Stadium (92,746)
LIVE TV: Raycom [Dave Neal, play-by-play; Dave Archer, color analyst; Dave Baker, sideline reporter]

THE COACHES
Bobby Johnson is in his seventh season at Vanderbilt with a record of 25-51 (.329) and in his 15th season overall with a record of 85-87 (.494). The Commodores' offensive coordinator is Ted Cain and the defensive coordinator is Bruce Fowler.
Mark Richt is in his eighth season at Georgia and overall with a record of 77-20 (.794). The Bulldogs' offensive coordinator is Mike Bobo and the defensive coordinator is Willie Martinez.

WHAT TO LOOK FOR WHEN VANDERBILT HAS THE BALL
Midway through the 2008 season, the Commodores' leading receiver Sean Walker has 15 catches. The offense left Starkville with season lows in first downs (7), rushing yards (45), passing yards (62), total yards (107) and total plays (46). It also matched a season low in points scored. The first down total, total yardage and total yards are all-time lows for the Commodore offense during the Bobby Johnson era. Mackenzi Adams is expected to get the start under center over Chris Nickson.

Rennie Curran leads the team in tackles (47), including a career-high 14 (10 solo) in a loss to Alabama. Curran has been the Bulldogs' top tackler four times this season and also leads the team with 3.0 sacks (tied for fifth in the SEC). Sophomore Darryl Gamble, who started for the injured Dannell Ellerbe at MLB against the Vols, tied for a team high with five tackles against Tennessee. Gamble ranks second on the team with 25 tackles.

WHAT TO LOOK FOR WHEN GEORGIA HAS THE BALL
Junior LB Patrick Benoist, junior safety Ryan Hamilton, junior CB Myron Lewis, CB D.J. Moore and freshman LB Chris Marve rank among the conference defensive leaders. Benoist ranks second in the SEC with 59 total tackles and fifth with 29 solo tackles. Hamilton is tied for eighth with 45 tackles and tied for second with three interceptions. Lewis is fifth with three QB sacks, eighth in interceptions and 10th in passes defensed. Moore ranks fourth with six defended passes. Marve has been one of the league's top defensive newcomers, ranking 10th with 44 total tackles.

Matthew Stafford is 22-5 as a starter. He registered career-high 310 yds. passing during 26-14 win over UT last week. He has thrown for 5,775 yards with 34 TDs and 26 INTs in his Bulldog career. Knowshon Moreno is tied for 12th in the nation in scoring with 60 points. Mohamed Massaquoi recorded a season-high 103 receiving yards and one TD on five catches against the Vols. It was his second career game over 100+ yards and his first since a career-high 108 yards against Auburn in 2005.

SPECIAL TEAMS
Brett Upson averaged 42.1 yards on eight punts at Mississippi State. His first punt was a season long (56 yards) and quickly changed field possession in favor of Vanderbilt. Upson is averaging a career-high 40.0 yards. His net average of 37.6 yards ranks third in the SEC and 22nd in the nation. Bryant Hahnfeldt is 7-of-9 in field goals, including three beyond 40 yards. He is also 16 of 16 on extra point attempts.

Blair Walsh scored a career high 14 points on four field goals (34, 20, 41, and 28 yards) and two PATs against UT. He has made 10 of his first 12 kicks. His two misses have come from 52 and 54 yards. Brian Mimbs ranks fifth in the SEC with a 42.2 average. He is also the holder for Walsh. Mimbs was recently named a semifinalist for the Draddy Trophy.

SERIES/GAME NOTES Record: UG, 48-18-2 • Last: UG, 20-17 (2007 at Nashville)
Since Mark Richt took over as Georgia's head coach in 2001, the Bulldogs have won six of seven meetings against Vanderbilt... However, Vandy won the last game against Georgia in Sanford Stadium after picking up a 24-22 win in 2006... The Bulldogs beat Vandy 20-17 last year with a field goal as time expired... Georgia leads the series 48-18-2 overall and is 24-4 in Sanford Stadium.

Tennessee vs Mississippi State Preview

Mississippi State at Tennessee

7:00 p.m. ET Knoxville, Tenn. Neyland Stadium (102,038)

THE COACHES
Sylvester Croom
is in his fifth season at Mississippi State and overall with a record of 19-34 (.358). The Bulldogs' offensive coordinator is Woody McCorvey and the defensive coordinator is Charlie Harbison.

Phillip Fulmer is in his 17th season at Tennessee and overall with a record of 149-49 (.752). The Volunteers' offensive coordinator is Dave Clawson and the defensive coordinator is John Chavis.

WHAT TO LOOK FOR WHEN MISSISSIPPI STATE HAS THE BALL
With Anthony Dixon's 27 rushes for 107 yards versus Vanderbilt, he moves into ninth place all-time at MSU in rushing yards. This is also Dixon's seventh 100-yard rushing performance of his career which is tied for 11th all time at State. In his second start as a Bulldog, Tyson Lee was an efficient 12-of-22 for 81 yards through the air, including the go-ahead touchdown pass early in the second half. He is yet to throw an interception. Brandon McRae leads the SEC with 33 receptions.

Ellix Wilson has led the team in tackles in four of six games including a career-high 16 at Georgia. He did not play vs. NIU due to a shoulder injury. He leads the SEC with 10.2 tackles per game. He had 16 at Georgia. Rico McCoy led the Vols with 10 stops vs. Florida and nine vs. NIU. Wilson has 4.5 TFL this season and one sack. McCoy was second on the team with 106 tackles last season. Eric Berry has nine career interceptions (four this season) and is the school-record holder in career interception return yards with 225. He has 34 tackles this season.

WHAT TO LOOK FOR WHEN TENNESSEE HAS THE BALL
Dominic Douglas leads the team with 44 tackles and ranks 10th in the SEC. K.J. Wright leads the team with six tackles for loss and is second on the team with 31 total tackles. He is tied for the team lead with Cortez McCraney with 2.0 sacks. Derek Pegues holds the MSU school record with three interception returns for touchdowns. De'Mon Glanton recorded four tackles with a tackle for loss and an interception against Vanderbilt.
Nick Stephens will start his third career game. He is 24-of-49 for 406 yards and three touchdowns this season. He has not thrown an interception in two starts. Arian Foster boasted 196 yards on 25 carries in his first two games (98 ypg, 7.8 ypc), but has gained just 145 yards on 43 carries in his last four games (36.3 ypg, 3.3 ypc). He is 343 yards from being UT's all-time leading rusher. Gerald Jones leads the team with 19 grabs for 251 yards through six games.

SPECIAL TEAMS
Adam Carlson's
first quarter field goal last week moved him into eighth place in MSU history with 36 field goals attempted. Blake McAdams punted 7 times for 203 yards Saturday placing him in a tie for seventh place in SEC history. His punting yardage moves him into 11th in SEC history with 9,743. Pegues had one kickoff return for 22 yards, moving him into third all-time in the SEC with 2,173 kickoff return yards.

Daniel Lincoln is 5-of-9 on field goals this season after making 21 of 29 a year ago. The Vols have not attempted a field goal in three of six games this year. Britton Colquitt returned to take over the punting duties at Georgia and kicked six times for 48.0-yard average. Gerald Jones is averaging 11 yards per punt return this season. Lennon Creer has returned five kickoffs for 70 yards in the last two games.

SERIES/GAME NOTES
Record: UT, 27-15-1 •
Last: UT, 33-21 (2007 at Starkville)
Tennessee leads the all-time series with Mississippi State 27-15-1, dating to 1907... The Volunteers hold a 12-7 edge in Knoxville, and UT head coach Phillip Fulmer boasts a 5-1 career mark against the Bulldogs...The Vols have won their last five games against MSU, and a Tennessee victory Saturday would mark the longest win streak in the series by either team (UT also won five straight from 1925-34)...The 43 games in this series have been spread among four different cities, including Starkville (nine games), Knoxville (19 games), Memphis (14 games) and Atlanta (the 1998 SEC Championship Game, which UT won 24-14).

Phil Fulmer Answers Questions On Miss. State

Q: How can three of the next four games at home help the Vols gain momentum for the season's second half?
PF: "Certainly we need some momentum. We need our crowd into it, we need familiar territory -- both of those would help greatly. I think our young quarterback having that support would help him tremendously. Hopefully, we'll give them plenty to cheer about along the way."

Q: Did you foresee the superb play of Ellix Wilson, who currently leads the SEC in tackles per game?

PF: "I did. I though Ellix had just an unbelievable spring. He's done and great job and Coach Chavis has done a great job with him. He's taken charge of this defensive football team, especially, but also become one of the leaders on our team. I could feel that coming. So much of what we do is around our middle linebacker being in position to make plays, just like Jerod Mayo did last year."


Q: Safety Eric Berry broke another UT record Saturday, this one for career interception return yards. Are you continually amazed by his accomplishments?

PF: "I am amazed that he has accomplished so much in such a short time. Not that he has accomplished what he has, but just in a short time. The guy has started every game since he's been here, he's a great practice player, and he's a great student of the game and student from an academic standpoint. He's just been a wonderful example of what you enjoy about college football and that's coaching young men like Eric Berry."


Q: How would you critique the play of quarterback Nick Stephens in his first SEC road start?

PF: "I thought OK. I thought he managed the game well, the noise didn't seem to bother him, and he kept us in the game and didn't make any huge mistakes along the way. I just think he's going to continue to get better and better with experience and playing time."


Q: How does Mississippi State's win over Vanderbilt give the Bulldogs added momentum coming into this Saturday's game at Neyland Stadium?

PF: "Any time you play well and beat a ranked team, that's a positive. Vanderbilt was on a real roll, and to hold any offensive football team to 107 total yards is quite an accomplishment. And they've got their big back (Anthony Dixon) running hard again and we dealt with that last year. We know he's a good player. They've got some momentum and we've got to take it away from them. We've got to get a big win at Neyland Stadium this week."



Saturday, October 11, 2008

Brown Has Played High Prep, College and Pro In Tennessee

By Terry McCormick
Tony Brown now has the security of a new contract he signed last year.He also has the satisfaction of knowing that, barring injury or unforeseen circumstances, he will be in the starting lineup for the Tennessee Titans at defensive tackle for the second consecutive season.

The former Chattanooga City High School star has taken a most circuitous route to finding success. Brown, 27, was discarded by three NFL teams, including the Carolina Panthers twice, before he landed in

Nashville just over a month into the 2006 season.
He was signed as a roster replacement for Albert Haynesworth when the Titans’ star was suspended for five weeks that season, but Brown has become much more than just a guy to fill a spot. He played well in a reserve role the rest of the 2006 season, and last year he overtook Randy Starks as a starter alongside Haynesworth.

Now the Titans are without Starks, Travis LaBoy and Antwan Odom and hope for an even bigger role for Brown.
“Losing the three guys we lost last year, I think it’s helped him because he’s now one of the guys that’s been in there, and he started 17 games last year,” defensive line coach Jim Washburn said.

“He’d been system to system, and now Tony is a leader and the young guys really like him. It’s a little bit different than the role he had last year, just being one of the guys. He’s a very charismatic guy, and he’s a really good football player.”

Even with that success, Brown won’t let it all go to his head. The only hint of him allowing himself to become secure in his mind about the situation came shortly after his contract extension last year when he finally bought a house in the Nashville area and moved his family from Chattanooga.

Before that, Brown had been renting a place during the season and was even making the hour-and-a-half trek from Chattanooga to Music City during part of the off-season activities.
Brown says his success hasn’t changed his work habits one iota from the days as a journeyman free agent trying to stick somewhere on an NFL roster.
“It feels good, but at the same time, I knew (at one time) I was the guy trying to get a job, too. So I practice every day like I still don’t know. And that’s the way I’m going to continue,” Brown said.

That attitude provides a good example for the many younger teammates who now look at Brown as someone they can learn from. That role is something he enjoys.
“I do, because there’s a few places I’ve been and I looked up to some guys, and they didn’t even help me. I don’t want to be that guy,” Brown said. “I don’t want anybody to fail. I want our entire team to be good. So I don’t see why I should hold information back from them.”

Titans coach Jeff Fisher said Brown has to be kept in check even during off-season work, especially with Haynesworth absent from organized team activities because of contract issues.

“We have to be careful with Tony because he likes to take every snap, and he doesn’t need to do that now,” Fisher said.

But Brown may never believe it.

Friday, October 10, 2008

War Scheduled In Cornbread Country
























SOUTH PITTSBURG -- The fans of the defending 1A state champion South Pittsburg Pirates are very passionate about their team.

Nevertheless, the fans of the 2A Boyd-Buchanan Bucs are proud of the 2003 state title and are equally as passionate about their football program.

When the two teams meet tonight in Beene Stadium in South Pittsburg pride and undefeated seasons are going to be on the line.

South Pittsburg and Boyd-Buchanan have developed an extremely intense rivalry over the years and this year’s game should be special.

Boyd-Buchanan has won six of the last eight meetings in this series, but South Pittsburg has won the last two meetings.

Here’s a story that appeared in the 2008 Tennessee Football magazine on South Pittsburg followed by complete preseason team capsules of both teams.


South Pittsburg: ‘Cornbread and Thoroughbreds’

By Scott Herpst
SOUTH PITTSBURG --- Nestled here in the Cumberland Plateau in the heart of the Appalachian Mountains near the Alabama and Georgia state lines is tiny South Pittsburg, Tennessee (pop. 3,300).

A trip to South Pittsburg is a step back in time - literally, Mayberry come to life.
Parking downtown is free and people buy clothes and other dry goods at Hammers Department Store. The taste of the town is the old-fashioned burgers and milkshakes from the Dixie Freeze, cooked the same way they were decades ago.

Most outsiders associate South Pittsburg with cornbread.

The town is home to the world-famous National Cornbread Festival, where for two days every April, thousands flock to celebrate of one of the south's delicious specialties.

Nevertheless, for the other 363 days out of the year, this is a football town.

Drive into South Pittsburg on a Friday night during the fall and you'll see a city bathed in orange and black. Storefronts proudly display their Pirate spirit with signs and posters in the windows. Atop every street post flies Pirate flags.

"It's like raising thoroughbreds," said Carl Mount, South Pittsburg alum who has been the team's statistician for the past 23 years. "Some people in town came up with the saying this past year that we're known for thoroughbreds and cornbread. Just like raising good thoroughbreds is a tradition in Kentucky, our tradition here is raising up good football players."

“Just like raising good thoroughbreds is a tradition in Kentucky,” said Carl Mount, a South Pittsburg High School alumnus who has been the team’s statistician the past 23 years, “our tradition here is raising up good football players.”

South Pittsburg is the only school in Tennessee that has played in a state final in every decade since the TSSAA began classification in 1969. Standing at the city limit is a huge orange and black sign detailing all of the state-title teams.

The Pirates won that first Class A championship in 1969 and others in 1994, ’99 and last season when they steamrolled their way to a 15-0 record, capped by a dominating 52-20 victory over McKenzie in Murfreesboro.

“There’s nothing like it,” coach Vic Grider said. “The only thing I can compare it to is the day my daughter was born. That’s the ultimate thing in my life right now, but winning a state championship is pretty special. Not so much for me but for the kids. They take so much pride in it, and it’s something that no one can ever take away from them.”

Principal Allen Pratt came to South Pittsburg from Maryville in 1997 as an assistant coach. After a brief stint as a head coach in northwest Georgia earlier this decade, Pratt returned to South Pittsburg.

“When the football season goes well, your school year goes well,” Pratt said. “Our school year was super great this year, and it’s attributed to the success of our football team.”
Jim “Hootie” Dunwoody played at South Pittsburg in the late 1950s and has filmed or taped the football games for more than 30 years.

“The tradition has been part of my life for about 60 years,” Dunwoody said. “I remember my father was taking me to games by the time I was 8 or 9 years old.

“If you go anywhere in the state and tell someone you’re from South Pittsburg, 90 to 95 percent of the time people will ask you about the Pirates,” he said. “We’ve become that well-known, and the winning never gets old.”

Steeped in tradition

From football’s beginnings at the high school in the early 1920s, South Pittsburg was a force. The team won more than 80 percent of its games in the first three decades.

“Tradition is a way of life for us here,” Mount said. “It doesn’t matter what aspect of life you’re talking about — whether it’s football or business or whatever — people are attracted to winners, and the desire to win and be No. 1 is what makes us Americans.”

The name Grider has become synonymous with South Pittsburg football.Don Grider, a Pirates player in the 1950s, played four seasons at Tennessee Tech before returning home to begin teaching and coaching. His first year as head coach, the Pirates beat Tennessee Prep School for the inaugural Class A state crown, and he remained head coach until 1992.

Although he never won another state championship, he guided the Pirates to state finals in 1974, ’85 and ’86.

He died shortly before the start of the 2007 season, following a long battle with diabetes. He is buried on a hill in a cemetery overlooking the football stadium.Mount played for Grider in the mid-1970s and remembers him as a strong-willed person.

“It didn’t matter what color you were or who your mama and daddy was,” Mount said. “If you got the job done, you played.”

Grider passed the torch to Danny Wilson, now the head coach at Cleveland High School, in 1993. A year later, the Pirates played in their first state final since 1986 and won their second TSSAA championship.

Wilson left after the 1996 season for a job in Maryville, his hometown, but the school didn’t have to look far to find his replacement. The successor was already on the staff.
Like father, like son

Some have said it was Vic Grider’s destiny to be head coach of Pirates. He played for his father from 1981 to ’85 and grew up on the Pirates sidelines. He is set to begin his 17th season on the coaching staff, with two state titles as head coach. Brother Heath Grider, who played from 1987 to ’90, was an assistant on both of those championship teams.

The brothers are proud to have built on their father’s legacy.
“I do take pride in it, but it’s so much more than me and my family, though,” Vic Grider said. “We are just the people who were put in this spot to lead this program at times. This all goes back years before we got here.”

He said he loves his job.

“Dad once said, ‘It’s fine to be lucky and fortunate to be where you’re at, but you better take advantage of it,’ and I think we’ve done that,” he said. “There is not a day goes by that I don’t feel fortunate to do what I get to do.”

Legends of the fall

Pirates stars become legends for life in South Pittsburg.
Longtime fans can recite the starting lineups for all four state championship teams. Townspeople love telling about the great ones — such as Jimmy Wigfall, a star tailback in 1969, and 1976 grad Bo Haden, who played professionally after a career at the University of Louisville.Brothers Marcus and Vincent Banks were standouts on the 1994 championship team.

Eddie Moore was a second-round draft pick of the Miami Dolphins. He led the Pirates to the 1999 state title before starring at linebacker at the University of Tennessee.
Mount likes to tell the story of David White.

“David played fullback and middle linebacker for us, and he was one of Don’s favorites,” Mount said. “He was maybe the toughest guy I ever saw play here. He was cut up so bad over his eye once during a game that you could put your finger down in the cut and wiggle it around. The trainer was going to sew him up with no Novocain, and David is saying, ‘Hurry up. I’ve got to get back in there.’ He had blood running from his eye all down his face, but as soon as he got sewed up, he was right back out there.”

Vic Grider said South Pittsburg has had a lot of great players but “made a living off of those average ones.”
“Good teams always have one or two great players, but it’s those average ones that usually determine a football game,” he said. “We’ve been fortunate to have a bunch of those guys who are willing to do anything they need to do to make South Pittsburg football successful.

“Don’t get me wrong. It’s a thrill to coach guys like Eddie Moore, Sam Pickett, Tim Starkey and Robert Robinson, but some of my best memories are about those guys no one talks about much.”
Said Mount: “I was just a kid from the other side of the tracks, but I was somebody because I played Pirate football.”

It’s all about pride

“It was a pride thing back then to wear the Orange and Black uniform, and it’s a pride thing now,” Dunwoody said. “It’s just instilled in you from the start.”
Beating Marion County is as important to most South Pittsburg players and fans as winning the state championship. The county-seat school seven miles away in Jasper is another program rich in tradition with four state championships.

“Every game against Jasper is special,” Dunwoody said.

The South Pittsburg and Marion County series is the longest-running continuous rivalry in the state. Before state classification put the schools in separate leagues, the game often determined conference championships. For years it was played on Thanksgiving Day.

“I remember my senior year we both came into the game 9-0,” Mount said. “The winner advanced to the playoffs and the loser stayed home. Games like that just add fuel to the fire.
“Athletes come and go in cycles, but even in down years, the gate from that one game will carry a program,” he added. “We have to keep the flames burning so we don’t lose the rivalry. There’s a lot at stake in keeping it a big rivalry.”

While big home crowds are a part of South Pittsburg tradition, the Pirates take thousands on the road for playoff games.

“This last (state) championship game was literally ‘the last one in town, turn off the lights,’” Dunwoody said. “The only ones that weren’t in Murfreesboro that night were the ones that absolutely couldn’t go. Everyone else was there.”

Vic Grider said he was even more overwhelmed than usual at the support for the 2007 title game.

“That’s the biggest crowd I’ve ever seen,” he said. “I don’t know who they all were, but I know they couldn’t have all been South Pittsburg people because we’ve only got 3,300 in this town.”

Said senior lineman Trevor Barnes: “When you come out on a Friday night and they are all cheering, there’s no better feeling in the world. But walking out up there in Murfreesboro and seeing the stands packed with people was just crazy.”
BOYD-BUCHANAN BUCCANEERS 2A-3
HEAD COACH: Grant Reynolds (3rd year, 8-15) COUNTY: Hamilton
2007 RECORD: 4-7 REGION RECORD: 3-1
LETTERMEN (RET/LEFT): N/A STARTERS (OFF/DEF): 7/7

SPEED READ An experienced offensive line and the return of their starting quarterback have the Bucs thinking region championship in 2008.

TOP PLAYERS Nic Hughes (Sr., QB), Seth Emery (Sr., LB), Cole Webster (Sr., OL/DL), Jordan Nason (Sr., FB/LB), Garrett Payne (Sr., OL), Taylor Gilley (Sr., RB/DB), Ben Beasley (Jr., RB), Devin Caldwell (Jr., OL/DL), Taylor Shull (Jr., ATH)

TEAM PLAYBOOK Excitement for Boyd-Buchanan's 2007 season was tempered very early last fall when Nic Hughes, one of the state's most promising young signal-callers, suffered a knee injury in the first game of the year. However, to the Bucs' credit, the team and coaches were able to regroup in time to make a run at the Region 2A-3 title. Now with Hughes 100 percent once more, the Bucs are thinking more than just a region crown. The Pro-I offense starts with the 6-2, 215-pound Hughes while Taylor Gilley and Jordan Nason combined for nearly 1,000 yards on the ground last fall. All three will benefit from an experienced line up front led by three-year starter Cole Webster, senior Garrett Payne and rising junior Devin Caldwell. Boyd-Buchanan boasts one of the region finest pair of linebackers in seniors Nason (64 tackles, seven sacks) and Seth Emery (over 100 tackles, six sacks, three interceptions), although additional depth must be found to compliment Webster and Caldwell on the line. The Bucs aren't blessed with an abundance of speed, but their grind-it-out style could have them in yet another showdown with region rival Tyner for the title.

SOUTH PITTSBURG PIRATES 1A-3
HEAD COACH: Vic Grider (12th year, 113-27) COUNTY: Marion
2007 RECORD: 15-0 REGION RECORD: 7-0
LETTERMEN (RET/LEFT): 31/13 STARTERS (OFF/DEF): 5/6

SPEED READ Until someone proves otherwise, the Pirates remain as the team to beat in all of Class A.

TOP PLAYERS David Jones (Sr., RB/LB), Montrell Mitchell (Sr., RB/LB), Kartrez Bibbs (Sr., RB/CB), Ty Robinson (Sr., WR/DB), Will Maynor (Sr., OL/DL), Trevor Barnes (Sr., OL/DL), Keaton Jones (Sr., OL/DL), Matthew Wayne (Sr., OL/DL), Chase Robinson (Sr., TE/DE), Terrell Robinson (Jr., QB/DB)

TEAM PLAYBOOK For all of its rich history, there's one thing South Pittsburg has never done - win back-to-back state championships. That could easily change this season as the Orange and Black appears to be back in a big way. While the Pirates will certainly miss the services of 13 valuable contributors from last season's state title team, the cupboard is far from bare. David Jones is coming off a "quiet" 2007 season that only saw him rush for 1,127 yards and 15 touchdowns to nab All-State honors. Add to that the fact that Jones was the region's Defensive Player of the Year and the Most Valuable Player of the Clinic Bowl. But while keeping up with Joneses is one thing, keeping up the Robinsons is another. Athletic junior Terrell Robinson will take the rein under center while seniors Ty Robinson and Chase Robinson are big targets at receiver and tight end respectively. On defense, the Pirates will also bring back secondary speedster Kartrez Bibbs, who missed 12 games last year, and his 4.4 speed. The only question - if there is one - centers around an offensive line that will have to be somewhat rebuilt, but retooling in the trenches is nothing new for the Pirates, who seems to thrive on finding new stars each season. Although the team doesn't have as much depth as usual, it has its usual abundance of speed and athleticism and that should be good enough for a 15th region title and just possibly a fifth state championship.

South Pitt vs. Boyd Buc (All-Time)
2007 SP 47-7
2006 SP 19-14
2004 BB 49-0
2003 BB 24-6 & BB 20-7
2002 BB 44-12
2001 BB 46-13
2000 BB 26-12
1999 SP 17-14 & SP 35-21
1998 SP 41-6 & SP 34-10
1997 SP 39-21
1996 BB 17-6
1995 SP 56-6
1994 SP 49-0
1993 SP 48-0
1992 SP 60-6
1991 SP 34-16
1978 SP 41-8
1977 SP 54-6

Total wins SP-14 BB-7
Largest Margin of Victory. SP by 54 in 1992. BB by 49 in 2004