Part II: Hello from Big Orange Country
Posted: Mon Aug 24, 2015 8:15 pm
Here are just a few Tennessee football facts for 2015 that you might have missed:
1) You know already that Tennessee offensive lineman Marcus Jackson is out for the season with a bicep tear. He was one of our most experienced offensive lineman. The fact you might have missed is that his backup guy sustained the same injury a few days later in practice, and he is out too. The coaching staff is scrambling like mad to figure out who to insert in their place from a bevy of young and relatively inexperienced players. So, there is a potential weakness in the Tennessee offensive line that may be there on game day. Young folks need to step up.
2) Pundits are saying now that they think the highly experienced Tennessee defensive line may be on of the 10 best in the nation this year and possibly in the Top 5. I tend to agree. The BGSU offense is going to have its hands full with what looks to be something of an iron curtain like you might expect at Ohio State or Alabama.
3) Tennessee now has an effective one-two punch in the backfield at running back. Both players are expected to mature into Jamal Lewis types---beginning this year---but there are still a few question marks there.
4) Tennessee quarterback Josh Dobbs has been getting a lot of good press in the sports news media. People are expecting big things from him---but I am more cautious. He still has a lot to learn. He is not the world's best passer. He is not good at standing in the pocket like a statue. However, he is absolutely terrifying loose with the ball and scrambling in the backfield like Condredge Holloway once did at Tennessee. Dobbs can actually do what Condredge did. He can actually do it, and he has that unique talent tat comes only as a gift from God. Get a load of this because you will probably see something very close to it on September 5.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D8vSZm1XXd8" target="_blank
However, if Dobbs goes down with an injury, there is really no experienced person to back him up. Think "high school quarterbacks" because that is basically what they are.
5) Tennessee is well-known in college football history for being "Wide Receiver U." We have an excellent stable of receivers, but these guys sometimes forget their fundamentals and try to catch balls with their bodies rather than their hands. They drop a lot of balls on a bad biorhythm days. They are also a bit on the historically banged up and fragile side---lots of past knee injuries and so forth. I tend to view them as a very real offensive threat that is just as likely to mess up or get injured as they are to score. They need to get healthy, stay healthy, remember the fundamentals, and play consistently on the field in 2015. We will all just have to wait and see.
6) Our linebackers are a bit younger and more inexperienced than I would like---but I think they can do the job well.
7) Our pass coverage people on defense are really good. They can sustain coverage, and they are fantastic pick-6 threats. One of the things General Neyland emphasized is that a college football team does not have an offense and a defense. Rather, it has two offenses. Neyland believed in the defense as having not just a contain function but also a scoring function. Butch Jones has been studying hard on the Neyland philosophy, and he has adopted this philosophy for the Tennessee defense. Our pass coverage people want the ball and are looking for every opportunity to take it and pick-6---more so than most other teams do. Of course, all defensive teams do---but not like this Tennessee team.
8) Tennessee is a real risk this year to throw to its tight ends rather than just use them entirely as blockers. If you will recall, this is how Tennessee beat the snot out of the University of Michigan in the 2002 Citrus Bowl---the first time the two teams had ever met on the field.
9) The kicking game at Tennessee is a huge question mark. Our extra point and field goal guy has a hard time hitting the broad side of the farm---much less the barn. Our outstanding punter for the past several years graduated, and we have only inexperienced people to replace him. I think General Neyland would kick Butch Jones in the behind for letting this happen to the kicking game at Tennessee because it was always one of his big emphases---but this year's kicking team is what it is---a huge question mark with relatively inexperienced people.
10) Well, that is basically my best perspective on the 2015 Tennessee football team for you BGSU folks. If you have any questions, either I or my son might be able to answer them for you---maybe not. He is 14 and he knows the team in a lot more detail than I do.
1) You know already that Tennessee offensive lineman Marcus Jackson is out for the season with a bicep tear. He was one of our most experienced offensive lineman. The fact you might have missed is that his backup guy sustained the same injury a few days later in practice, and he is out too. The coaching staff is scrambling like mad to figure out who to insert in their place from a bevy of young and relatively inexperienced players. So, there is a potential weakness in the Tennessee offensive line that may be there on game day. Young folks need to step up.
2) Pundits are saying now that they think the highly experienced Tennessee defensive line may be on of the 10 best in the nation this year and possibly in the Top 5. I tend to agree. The BGSU offense is going to have its hands full with what looks to be something of an iron curtain like you might expect at Ohio State or Alabama.
3) Tennessee now has an effective one-two punch in the backfield at running back. Both players are expected to mature into Jamal Lewis types---beginning this year---but there are still a few question marks there.
4) Tennessee quarterback Josh Dobbs has been getting a lot of good press in the sports news media. People are expecting big things from him---but I am more cautious. He still has a lot to learn. He is not the world's best passer. He is not good at standing in the pocket like a statue. However, he is absolutely terrifying loose with the ball and scrambling in the backfield like Condredge Holloway once did at Tennessee. Dobbs can actually do what Condredge did. He can actually do it, and he has that unique talent tat comes only as a gift from God. Get a load of this because you will probably see something very close to it on September 5.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D8vSZm1XXd8" target="_blank
However, if Dobbs goes down with an injury, there is really no experienced person to back him up. Think "high school quarterbacks" because that is basically what they are.
5) Tennessee is well-known in college football history for being "Wide Receiver U." We have an excellent stable of receivers, but these guys sometimes forget their fundamentals and try to catch balls with their bodies rather than their hands. They drop a lot of balls on a bad biorhythm days. They are also a bit on the historically banged up and fragile side---lots of past knee injuries and so forth. I tend to view them as a very real offensive threat that is just as likely to mess up or get injured as they are to score. They need to get healthy, stay healthy, remember the fundamentals, and play consistently on the field in 2015. We will all just have to wait and see.
6) Our linebackers are a bit younger and more inexperienced than I would like---but I think they can do the job well.
7) Our pass coverage people on defense are really good. They can sustain coverage, and they are fantastic pick-6 threats. One of the things General Neyland emphasized is that a college football team does not have an offense and a defense. Rather, it has two offenses. Neyland believed in the defense as having not just a contain function but also a scoring function. Butch Jones has been studying hard on the Neyland philosophy, and he has adopted this philosophy for the Tennessee defense. Our pass coverage people want the ball and are looking for every opportunity to take it and pick-6---more so than most other teams do. Of course, all defensive teams do---but not like this Tennessee team.
8) Tennessee is a real risk this year to throw to its tight ends rather than just use them entirely as blockers. If you will recall, this is how Tennessee beat the snot out of the University of Michigan in the 2002 Citrus Bowl---the first time the two teams had ever met on the field.
9) The kicking game at Tennessee is a huge question mark. Our extra point and field goal guy has a hard time hitting the broad side of the farm---much less the barn. Our outstanding punter for the past several years graduated, and we have only inexperienced people to replace him. I think General Neyland would kick Butch Jones in the behind for letting this happen to the kicking game at Tennessee because it was always one of his big emphases---but this year's kicking team is what it is---a huge question mark with relatively inexperienced people.
10) Well, that is basically my best perspective on the 2015 Tennessee football team for you BGSU folks. If you have any questions, either I or my son might be able to answer them for you---maybe not. He is 14 and he knows the team in a lot more detail than I do.