Brandon Kennedy details preparation for playing at No. 3 Georgia

Brandon Kennedy details preparation for playing at No. 3 Georgia.

KNOXVILLE — No. 12 Tennessee enters Week 3 of a 10-game SEC only schedule ranked second in the conference averaging 182.5 rushing yards per contest.

The Vols totaled 232 yards on the ground against Missouri and 133 at South Carolina in Week 1.

Ahead of playing at No. 3 Georgia Saturday, redshirt senior center Brandon Kennedy discussed facing the Bulldogs defense.

“So far, what we’ve seen out of Georgia up front, they’re very big,” Kennedy said. “I think the nose, No. 99 Jordan Davis, uses his size to his advantage when going against blockers in the run game.

“So, our biggest thing moving forward is that we’ve got to continue being physical and execute at a high level. I think we can be successful.”

Georgia defensive lineman Jordan Davis (99) against Arkansas during an NCAA college football game in Fayetteville, Ark. Saturday, Sept. 26, 2020. (AP Photo/Michael Woods)

Through two games against Arkansas and Auburn, Georgia is giving up 58.0 rushing yards per contest.

The Bulldogs’ success has been in part with the ability to have different defensive looks.

“Anytime a defense has multiple fronts, I put the responsibility on me as a center to keep us on the same page,” Kennedy said in preparation for playing at Georgia. “What I have been doing this week is going back and looking at some of the games they had last year, and also the first two games this year, just seeing the multiple fronts they could give us.

“So when we get into the game, I’ll know what to expect and to keep us on the same page and have success.”

KNOXVILLE, TN – AUGUST 19, 2020 – Offensive lineman Brandon Kennedy #55 of the Tennessee Volunteers during 2020 Fall Camp practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Caleb Jones/Tennessee Athletics

[vertical-gallery id=28377]

‘Mental processing has went through the roof’ for J.T. Shrout

‘Mental processing has went through the roof’ for J.T. Shrout.

Tennessee’s ‘quarterbacks threw the ball well’ in first fall practice

KNOXVILLE — Quarterback J.T. Shrout enters his third season in Jeremy Pruitt’s program at Tennessee.

The 6-foot-3, 213-pound redshirt sophomore appeared in four games and started one contest last season. Shrout finished the season going 13-for-27 through-the-air and totaled 179 passing yards and one touchdown.

Shrout is part of a quarterback room that consists of redshirt senior Jarrett Guarantano, sophomore Brian Maurer and freshman Harrison Bailey. Guarantano, Maurer and Shrout all started games last season.

KNOXVILLE, TN – AUGUST 21, 2020 – Quarterback J.T. Shrout #12 of the Tennessee Volunteers during 2020 Fall Camp practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Andrew Ferguson/Tennessee Athletics

Sixth-year senior center Brandon Kennedy discussed Shrout and his improvement heading into the 2020 season.

“I think as far as all of the quarterbacks, and him too, as far as mental processing, I think that has went through the roof, especially with this time off,” Kennedy said of Shrout and Tennessee’s quarterback unit. “Guys have been able to watch more films and things like that.

“With him and all of the others quarterbacks in the room, I think that we have a lot more depth and also experience because a lot of guys played last year. I feel like it served him well.”

Brandon Kennedy discusses education and life after football

Brandon Kennedy discusses education and life after football.

KNOXVILLE — Tennessee opened fall training camp Monday ahead of the 2020 season that starts Sept. 26 at South Carolina.

Center Brandon Kennedy returns to the Vols for his sixth collegiate season after receiving a medical redshirt for the upcoming campaign.

Kennedy transferred to Tennessee from Alabama in 2018. He suffered a season-ending injury in practice following Week 1 during his first season with the Vols.

The sixth-year senior has appeared in 14 games for the Vols and 10 contests at Alabama.

KNOXVILLE, TN – AUGUST 19, 2020 – Offensive lineman Brandon Kennedy #55 of the Tennessee Volunteers during 2020 Fall Camp practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Caleb Jones/Tennessee Athletics

During his time in college, Kennedy has strived in the classroom, earning a bachelor’s degree from Alabama in recreation and sport management in three years. The 6-foot-3, 300-pound center completed his master’s degree in sports psychology and motor behavior in Dec. 2019.

Kennedy is now pursuing another degree that he will complete at the end of the semester.

“Life after football, I want to go into sports psychology,” Kennedy said. “I want to become a licensed sports psychologist and either work with NFL or college teams just to give back and help athletes.

“I’m working on an agriculture leadership degree, so within that we’re talking about different servant leadership principles and how to communicate and kind of bring guys along. That’s been helping a lot with me as an older guy and having to deal with a lot of younger guys and kind of help them along, it’s served me well.”

Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

2020 UT football player card: Brandon Kennedy

2020 UT football player card: Brandon Kennedy

Brandon Kennedy, offensive lineman (No. 55)

Class: Redshirt senior

Height: 6-3

Weight: 301

Hometown: Wetumpka, Alabama

High School: Wetumpka

Brandon Kennedy’s college football career has been a long road. A former 4-star and Alabama transfer, Kennedy will play his sixth season of eligibility in 2020 after being approved for a medical hardship.

After missing almost all of the 2018 season, Kennedy was Tennessee’s most consistent offensive lineman in 2019, starting every game and produced good performances. Kennedy will man the middle of an extraordinarily talented and experienced group in 2020, while playing another key role as a leader.

2020 Tennessee football schedule

  • Sept. 5 vs. Charlotte (Knoxville)
  • Sept. 12 at Oklahoma (Norman)
  • Sept. 19 vs. Furman (Knoxville)
  • Sept. 26 vs. Florida (Knoxville)
  • Oct. 3 vs. Missouri (Knoxville)
  • Oct. 10 at South Carolina (Columbia)
  • Oct. 17 OPEN DATE
  • Oct. 24 vs. Alabama (Knoxville)
  • Oct. 31 at Arkansas (Fayetteville)
  • Nov. 7 vs. Kentucky (Knoxville)
  • Nov. 14 at Georgia (Athens)
  • Nov. 21 vs. Troy (Knoxville)
  • Nov. 28 at Vanderbilt (Nashville)

A way-too-early preview of Tennessee’s 2020 offensive line

A way-too-early preview of Tennessee’s 2020 offensive line.

After a strong end to the 2019 season, in which Tennessee’s offensive line helped the Vols rush for 552 yards and five touchdowns while only allowing one sack in the final three games, the unit entered the offseason with plenty of momentum.

Even with the outgoing transfers of contributors Ryan Johnson and Marcus Tatum, along with the assumed departure of starting left guard Trey Smith to the NFL Draft, the offensive line was poised to be a strength for Tennessee in 2020.

Then, the unexpected happened. Not only did Smith announce his return for his senior season, but Georgia offensive lineman Cade Mays, a former Tennessee commit and Tennessee legacy, abruptly declared he would transfer from Athens to Knoxville for his junior year.

Pending an immediate eligibility waiver, Mays’ lawyer says he is “highly confident” his client will play next season. With Mays’ immediate eligibility, the Vols could potentially have four former 5-stars and a 4-star starting on the offensive line in 2020.

Suddenly, offensive line coach Will Friend has an embarrassment of riches to develop up front.

Smith will be back at left guard, and could play his way into a first round draft grade in his senior season. Arguably the most talented player on Tennessee’s roster, Smith’s battle with blood clots has been well-documented, and was often cited as a reason why most believed he would declare early for the draft. Tennessee put him on a program that held him out of contact in practice throughout the season, and Smith ended 2019 as a first team All-SEC player. Smith believes another complete season at Tennessee could ease NFL scouts’ concern that his health could terminate his career early, and the Vols will benefit greatly from that decision.

Not only does Tennessee return a complete mauler up front as one of the best offensive linemen in the country, but also a leader in the locker room and a fixture in the Knoxville community.

If Mays is immediately eligible this season, the Vols will have the benefit of an experienced, talented and versatile lineman that would have been a sure-fire starter for the Bulldogs in 2020. It seems as though right guard could be the best fit for Mays in Knoxville, but the rising junior started at four different positions along the Georgia offensive line during his two seasons in Athens.

At center, Tennessee received another boost when Brandon Kennedy announced he was granted a sixth year of eligibility on a medical hardship after missing nearly all of 2018 with a torn ACL. The only offensive lineman to start every game at the same position for Tennessee in 2019, the Alabama transfer and former 4-star prospect will bring a veteran presence at one of the most important positions on the field.

The rising sophomore duo of Wanya Morris and Darnell Wright will also return, and are expected to bookend the left and right tackle spots when the Vols kick off 2020 against Charlotte in Neyland Stadium. Morris started 12 games in 2019 and finished the season strong, earning several freshman All-America honors and being named to the Freshman All-SEC team while showcasing his natural ability, particularly as a pass blocker.

Wright came to campus in the summer, and was not as much of a staple as Morris, making six starts at right tackle all season. The former 5-star did join Morris on the Freshman All-SEC list however, and will be expected to make big strides in the lead-up to 2020 with his 6-foot-6, 330-pound frame.

Rising redshirt junior K’Rojhn Calbert and redshirt senior Jahmir Johnson bring experience and depth at both tackle spots, and are both players Tennessee’s staff will trust to step in. Make no mistake, however, all eyes will be on Wright and Morris to become All-SEC caliber players in 2020.

Rising junior Jerome Carvin started the final seven games for Tennessee in 2019, and could be penciled in as the starter at right guard if Mays is ruled ineligible. Carvin could shift over as a backup at center for Kennedy as well, and the Memphis native will be a key part of this unit’s depth. Riley Locklear is another member of the line with starting experience at different positions playing out his senior season in 2020.

Another legacy in Jackson Lampley, the son of former Vol Brad Lampley, redshirted in 2019 while appearing in two games. The former 4-star Nashville native could be called upon to add depth in 2020, along with Chris Akporoghene, Kingston Harris and Ollie Lane.

Tennessee brings in a crop of newcomers to build for the future, and it remains to be seen how the young players fit into the 2020 rotation, especially after the news of Smith and Mays this offseason.

Cooper Mays, the younger brother of Cade, is the only offensive lineman on campus as an early-enrollee. A 4-star out of Knoxville Catholic, Mays was a key member of Tennessee’s 2020 class. 6-foot-3, 338-pound guard Javontez Spraggins will join Tennessee in the summer, along with 6-foot-4, 323-pound guard James Robinson from Montgomery, Ala.

Tennessee returns all of its running backs in 2020, and has a crowded quarterback room going into spring football to play behind Friend’s unit. For the first time in the Jeremy Pruitt era, the offensive line is arguably the most secure, experienced and talented unit on the offense.

Tennessee kicks off bowl practice in Jacksonville

2020 Gator Bowl.

[jwplayer 7MVgGU4b]

JACKSONVILLE — Tennessee took part in its first bowl practice in Jacksonville, Fla.

The Vols will play Indiana Jan. 2 at 7 p.m. ET in the TaxSlayer Gator Bowl.

“We had nine really good days before we came down, really before the Christmas break,” Jeremy Pruitt said. “We got a lot of work in, a lot of physical work in, so it was good for our guys.

“We kind of kept the practices short and had a lot of competition with the ones, twos, and threes. The guys responded the right way. We really spent the last two days working on Indiana. We’ve had good work there too.”

Pruitt also discussed the meaning of the contest against Indiana and the outcome of the matchup heading into the offseason.

“The last five games we have played really well,” the second-year UT head coach said. “Before that, we kind of started moving in the right direction. We want to finish. We are going to remember this game for a long time and we have some seniors on our team that have really worked hard to turn this program in the positive direction and we want to send these guys off the right way.”

Pruitt did mention that redshirt senior offensive lineman Brandon Kennedy is a game-time decision against the Hoosiers.

“He’s practiced a little bit the last couple of days,” Pruitt said of Kennedy. “We’ll see, it’ll really be a game-time decision.”

The Vols’ offensive line also saw Ryan Johnson and Marcus Tatum transfer this month as graduates.

“Those guys have done a good job for us – graduated and really good for our program,” Pruitt said. “It was an opportunity for them. They didn’t get to play as much as they wanted to play. They want to play.

“We had guys that had performed better this year, that gave us a better opportunity to have success and they understood that it’s part of football.”

Another element of Tennessee’s offensive line is junior Trey Smith and his future. Pruitt mentioned that the two have already discussed Smith’s future and will revisit it during the offseason.

“It’s something that we’ll sit down, when this game is over with and talk about again,” Pruitt concluded.

Jeremy Pruitt updates Brandon Kennedy’s status for Gator Bowl

2020 Gator Bowl: Tennessee-Indiana

KNOXVILLE — Tennessee has kicked off bowl practices in preparation for its Jan. 2 TaxSlayer Gator Bowl matchup against Indiana.

With post-season practices underway, second-year Tennessee head coach Jeremy Pruitt discussed redshirt senior offensive lineman Brandon Kennedy’s status for the contest.

“He had a little procedure done after the Vanderbilt game,” Pruitt said of Kennedy.

Pruitt said Kennedy did not take part in the Vols’ first bowl practice.

“He won’t practice for the next probably 10 days,” Pruitt said. “In 10 more days, we’ll look at him and see if doc thinks he’s ready to play or ready to practice, we’ll see where he’s at. If he’s not, he won’t play, so it’ll be a couple of weeks before we know anything.”

Kennedy started every game this season at center for the Vols.

UT News: November 27, 2019

UT News: November 27, 2019

We have reached the middle of the week — and also the day before Thanksgiving — which means football is in the air, as the Volunteers gear up for their final regular-season game against the Vanderbilt Commodores. The Vols have been on a roll in the athletics realm, but they have also excelled in the classroom as well. Speaking of doing well, the Lady Vols basketball team continues to roll along after defeating the Arkansas-Pine Bluff Golden Lions last night, and their coach had a few things to say about the hot start. The hottest of them all might be quarterback Jarrett Guarantano, but let us discuss the academic accolades first.

Record four Vols make academic all-district team

The Tennessee Volunteers have scored big in the classroom, with four football players earning CoSIDA Academic All-District First Team honors — the most among Power 5 programs.

Redshirt senior offensive lineman Brandon Kennedy, redshirt junior offensive lineman Ryan Johnson, junior defensive lineman Matthew Butler and sophomore punter/kicker Paxton Brooks were selected by CoSIDA in District 3 this month for their combined excellence both in athletics and academics. The four are also eligible for Academic All-American honors as well.

Johnson received his second consecutive selection — only the third Vol ever to earn the feat, with Parker Henry and Peyton Manning being the only other two. Overall, Tennessee now has 32 all-time CoSIDA Academic All-District honors.

NEXT: Coach Harper breaks the Lady Vols down

UT football sets school record with four Vols named to CoSIDA Academic All-District First Team

UT football sets school record with four Vols named to CoSIDA Academic All-District First Team.

KNOXVILLE — The Tennessee football team set a school record with four Vols being named to the CoSIDA Academic All-District First Team.

UT press release:

The Tennessee football team set a school record with four Vols collecting CoSIDA Academic All-District First Team honors this fall, the most of any Power 5 program.

Redshirt senior offensive lineman Brandon Kennedy, redshirt junior offensive lineman Ryan Johnson, junior defensive lineman Matthew Butler and sophomore punter/kicker Paxton Brooks were selected for the honor in District 3 by CoSIDA this month. The award recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the field and in the classroom.

Tennessee’s quartet is eligible to be named Academic All-Americans this season, as well.

Johnson was selected to the All-District First Team for the second straight season, making him only the third Vol ever to receive the honor in back-to-back years, joining holder Parker Henry (2016-17) and quarterback Peyton Manning (1996-97). Kicker Daniel Lincoln also won the award twice, but not in consecutive seasons (2007, 2009).

Overall, Tennessee now has 32 all-time CoSIDA Academic All-District honors.

Tennessee’s previous school-record for most All-District winners was three in 2016. The Academic All-District Team has been recognized since at least 1956.

Brooks, who holds a 3.98 GPA and is majoring in Kinesiology, was selected for the First Team as a specialist.

Kennedy holds a 3.84 GPA while working on his master’s degree in sports psychology and motor behavior. He is set to graduate in December and will have a sixth year of eligibility remaining. Kennedy earned his bachelor’s degree in recreation and sports management from Alabama in three years before transferring to Tennessee.

Kennedy is the Vols’ starting center and is the only Vol to start every game on the offensive line. He captured SEC Offensive Line of the Week honors following a dominant performance against South Carolina in October and has paved the way for UT’s offensive success with four different players lining up at quarterback this fall.

Johnson is an All-District First Team honoree for a second consecutive season. He has a 3.88 GPA while working on his master’s in structural engineering after graduating in three years with a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering. Johnson has appeared in every game this season while making three starts at guard. He was also chosen to be in this year’s VOLeaders Academy class.

Butler holds a 3.64 GPA and is majoring in political science. He is a member of the VOLeaders Academy and traveled to Rwanda this summer as part of community service and educational trip with the program.

Student-athletes eligible for Academic All-District status are those holding a cumulative grade point average of at least 3.30 (on a 4.0 scale). Nominees must also have reached sophomore athletic and academic standing at their institution and have completed at least one calendar year at the institution.