Tennessee finished No. 6, while Alabama is ranked fifth.
Tennessee’s 2022 regular-season schedule featured home games against Ball State (W, 59-10), Akron (W, 63-6), Florida (W, 38-33), Alabama (W, 52-49), UT Martin (W, 65-24), Kentucky (W, 44-6) and Missouri (W, 66-24).
The Vols’ 2022 schedule featured road contests at Pittsburgh (W, 34-27 OT) in the second edition of the Johnny Majors Classic, LSU (W, 40-13), Georgia (L, 27-13), South Carolina (L, 63-38) and Vanderbilt (W, 56-0).
Tennessee defeated Clemson, 31-14, in the Capital One Orange Bowl to conclude its 2022 season on Dec. 30.
Arkansas State head coach Butch Jones voted in the USA TODAY Sports AFCA Coaches Poll during the 2022 season. He served as Tennessee’s head coach from 2013-17.
“Probably had the most unique experience I’ve ever had in my life,” Jones said. “Not to bore anyone, but I was out recruiting in Arkansas on Friday and went to a couple of high school games. I get done with the first game. In my car, I’m getting ready to go to the next one.
“I was driving myself, and if you can picture a one lane side road to get out of the interstate, bounded by two cement barriers. The next thing I know, I have a car that’s trying to run me off the road and smash me. I look up and I’m in the middle of a high-speed police pursuit, chase, however you want to do deem it. About $15,000 worth of damage trying running me off the road, escaped the police and they caught him down the road, so that was my bizarre story of the bye week.”
Jones served as Tennessee’s head coach from 2013-17, compiling a 34-27 record and winning three bowl games. Below are Tennessee’s results under Jones from 2013-17.
PHOTOS: Tennessee football head coaches through the years
Tennessee has a storied football program that began play in 1891.
The Vols have won six national championships (1938, 1940, 1950, 1951, 1967, 1998). Robert Neyland won four national championships as Tennessee’s head coach, while Doug Dickey and Phillip Fulmer each guided the Vols to one title.
Tennessee has won 13 Southeastern Conference championships: Phillip Fulmer (2), Johnny Majors (3), Doug Dickey (2), Bowden Wyatt (1) and Robert Neyland (5).
UT won two Southern Conference championships under Neyland in 1927 and 1932.
Tennessee also won the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association title in 1914 under head coach Zora G. Clevenger.
Below are photos of Tennessee’s head coaches through the years.
Hear everything opposing coach Butch Jones said about Ohio State after the #Buckeyes victory.
The Ohio State football team probably didn’t have the showing it wanted against a Sun Belt opponent, the Arkansas State Red Wolves, but it was a comfortable win nonetheless. In fact, the Buckeyes (2-0) have every goal still on the table.
We like to keep tabs on what the opposing coaches say after facing Ohio State, and Red Wolves head coach Butch Jones is no stranger to elite talent. He coached in the SEC at Tennessee and has seen some very good teams with an abundance of talent and skill.
We’ve got everything Jones said about the Buckeyes following the 45-12 loss his team experienced, and he was very complimentary of the opposite sideline. If you’d like to hear everything Jones said about the challenge of playing OSU, the respect for Ryan Day, how his team fought in the first half, and more, you can head over to kait8.com, the ABC affiliate in Jonesboro, Arkansas.
Roll Tide Wire takes a look at former Alabama assistants under Nick Saban that have since become head coaches at different programs across the country.
[autotag]Nick Saban[/autotag] has been able to generate buzz on the field and off the field since joining the Crimson Tide program as head coach in 2007. Both coaches and recruits alike come to Alabama with similar goals: to win and boost their respective careers.
Over the years, I think it is safe to say that Saban has fulfilled those wishes and more. Several of Coach Saban’s assistants have moved elsewhere to take on different roles as coaches. The Alabama football program has become accustomed to rebuilding its staff occasionally because of assistants being hired to larger roles for different collegiate programs across the country.
Today, Roll Tide Wire will look at some of Saban’s former assistant coaches that were on staff at Alabama and are currently head coaches for different collegiate programs across the country. Read along to find out how much success Saban has truly had developing his coaches from coordinators to head coaches of prestigious programs across the college football landscape.
247Sports thinks Florida’s first loss will come early in 2022.
Florida football’s 2022 campaign is still months away, but as the summer months begin to creep in, opening weekend will be here quicker than most think. With the spring practice schedule now well in the rearview mirror, it is high time to start looking ahead at what might happen when fall finally arrives.
247Sports’ Austin Nivison took a stab at predicting every Southeastern Conference team’s first loss this coming season, with his prediction for the Gators being a bit unsettling for Florida fans. He believes that the Orange and Blue will fall first in Week 2 against the Tennessee Volunteers in what was once a proud rivalry that has been reduced to an SEC afterthought in recent years.
While the Gators have absolutely dominated the series over nearly the past two decades, winning 16 of the last 17 matchups, given that the game is in Knoxville it could be a good bet for the recent five-game winning streak to come to an end. Here is Vinison’s justification for his selection.
The Volunteers have a legitimate shot to score a rare win over the Gators this fall. However, the history indicates that won’t happen. Since Tennessee’s last win in this series, which came in 2016, Florida has taken control with several wins coming in lopsided fashion. Between home-field advantage, veteran quarterback Hendon Hooker, and all the changes Florida went through in the offseason, Tennessee does have a few things working in its favor. Having said that, the Gators are still plenty talented, and they seem to have a bit of psychological edge in this rivalry game.
The Vols’ only win over the past 17 years came in 2016 when [autotag]Jim McElwain[/autotag]’s team fell short of [autotag]Butch Jones[/autotag]’ squad on the road, 38-28. Of course, that stretch also includes the memorable Heave to Cleve play to beat Tennessee the following year.
Vols Wire revisits the annual salaries of Tennessee’s head football coaches over the past decade.
The salaries of college football head coaches have skyrocketed over the past decade, greatly outpacing inflation.
The Tennessee Volunteers program is no exception. Although $1 in 2012 is now worth $1.23, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor and Statistics, the Vols paid Josh Heupel in 2021 twice as much as Derek Dooley earned in 2012.
To get an idea of how rapidly coaching salaries are rising, Vols Wire compiled the annual compensation paid out to University of Tennessee head football coaches over the past decade below.
Ken Smithmier, a judgement expert hired by Alabama, provides analysis of Josh Heupel, Butch Jones, Lane Kiffin, Dan Mullen, Jeremy Pruitt and Nick Saban.
Ken Smithmier has worked closely with Alabama’s football program under seven-time national championship head coach Nick Saban.
Smithmier is a judgement expert with P3 Insights who provides advice to the likes of Saban and other coaches and administrators throughout college football.
His calling with Alabama came on the heels of Saban firing then-offensive coordinator Lane Kiffin during the College Football Playoff in 2016. Kiffin was hired as Florida Atlantic’s head coach, and was relieved from his duties by Saban after he did not provide his full attention to Alabama’s team.
Smithmier joined the show “Football Two-A-Days” and discussed how he was connected with Alabama’s program and Saban. Smithmier also discussed how much longer he anticipates Saban to coach. Saban turns 70 on Oct. 31.
“Saban loves what he does and is good at we he does,” Smithmier said. “He is never going to retire until he either gets sick or dies because there would not be a replacement for the psychological replacement that comes from what he is doing right now and is so engaged.
“When Saban fired Kiffin a week before the national championship, I wrote a column in the Business Journal about it. The headline was ‘Did Saban make a judgment error? What stress and pressure can do to any leader.’ A few weeks after it was published, I printed out a copy of the article and put together some materials about what I do. I put them in an envelope and I mailed them to Saban. I have done this before with Ole Miss when Hugh Freeze blew up, I did it with Baylor, I did it with Tennessee with Butch Jones. One day, a few weeks after that, my phone rings and I look at it and it says Tuscaloosa. I pick up the phone and it is Scott Cochran. He said ‘Coach gave me your materials and told me to call you and see what you can do to help improve our football team.’ The one guy in the United States that probably does not need a thing from me, was the one guy out of all the schools that I wrote all of these letters — to learn what I do — I wound up getting hired by them.”
Butch Jones, Jeremy Pruitt and Josh Heupel
Smithmier has interacted with former Tennessee head coaches Butch Jones and Jeremy Pruitt, as well as watching Josh Heupel from afar.
Smithmier emailed former Tennessee athletics director John Currie about Jones before he was relieved of his duties as the Vols’ head coach.
He did not hear back from Currie, but did connect with Jones in Tuscaloosa.
“I connected with Butch when he was an analyst at Alabama,” Smithmier said. “Near the end of his tenure, I had sent an email to John Currie when I watched Butch, what I thought was kind of a disastrous press conference. I was trying to describe to Currie what I thought was going on with him. I never heard anything from it.
“I told Butch about that in Tuscaloosa. I actually pulled the email up on my computer and let him read it. Butch always carried a notebook and a pen. He was writing down all these things that he and I were talking about. My sense of Butch was, he knew how to check off the boxes, but he did not grasp, or does not grasp, how to take all of those boxes and assembling them and organizing them into a broad strategic plan.”
During the early stages of Pruitt’s tenure he questioned fans who were not at the annual Orange & White Game, as he expected them to be in attendance.
“I met Jeremy, I did the same work for Jeremy one year at Tennessee that I did for Alabama,” Smithmier said. “Hubris, it’s a Greek word. The Greek’s put the word together, that they said when a mortal starts to act like a God, the gods will come down and wreak havoc from their heads.
“I thought Jeremy suffered from a little bit of that hubris. We saw how he talked about the fans early on in his tenure for instance, maybe comments he shouldn’t have made.”
From afar, Smithmier views Heupel with high praise during his first season as Tennessee’s head coach.
“Heupel I do not know, but other than Mel Tucker at Michigan State, I don’t think there is any coach in the country that has done a more remarkable job in getting a program back on track than Heupel,” he said. “He clearly has a way to connect with his players personally or else they would not be rallying and playing like they are playing. He also has a clear sense, I don’t know if he ever articulates it, of kind of what he wants this team to be and what this offense is — because this offense works.
“I know coaches don’t believe in moral victories, but I believe in moral victories when you are rebuilding a company or when you are rebuilding a football team. The tangible victories, the big product sale, or the big win over Alabama, those don’t come very easily, but if you could get the psychology of the organization moving in the right direction, you have people bought in, like I think Heupel does, the product results are going to come. Maybe they won’t come this year, maybe there won’t be a whole lot of them next year, I don’t know, but I am on board of what Heupel is doing.”
Lane Kiffin and Dan Mullen
Dan Mullen enters Florida’s matchup in Week 9 against Georgia 2-6 in games against Power Five opponents in its last eight contests.
The Gators have defeated Tennessee and Vanderbilt, while suffering defeats to LSU twice, Alabama twice, Oklahoma and Kentucky.
Smithmier questions if Mullen is a national championship head coach.
“I don’t know Mullen, so once again, I am looking at people from afar,” he said. “Mullen’s profile is one that I run into a lot in successful executives. I describe it this way, there are people who are successful in spite of themselves and there are people who are successful because of themselves. Those who are successful in spite of themselves have success that is limited.
“I think Dan is a guy who’s success is going to always be in spite of himself. He thinks he is the smartest guy in the room. If he were an athlete, I think we would say he is a guy that does not take coaching well because when you think you are the smartest guy in the room, you don’t think you need that coaching. I personally would be surprised if he were to ever win a national championship.”
Smithmier further detailed Kiffin and his past of not staying at jobs very long and a desire to overcome Saban in his career.
“Kiffin strikes me, and his history supports this, as a guy that is inherently unstable,” he said. “I don’t mean unstable psychologically, I am not implying that, I am not qualified to make that call. Just look at his tenure. How it turned out at Tennessee, how it turned out at USC, Saban fires him a week before the national championship game while he is down house hunting in Boca.
“Whether he goes to LSU, or USC, or anywhere, I can’t imagine that Lane is going to spend the rest of his career, or even 10 years at Ole Miss building a program. I think somewhere in him, is this desire to ultimately overcome Saban. I think the one job that if he were to ever plant and stay for a long time would be if he could get Alabama. My fun kind of hypothetical scenario is Lane gets the LSU job, wins the national championship, and then Saban retires. Lane jilts LSU and goes to Alabama because he ultimately wants to be the guy that sits in Nick Saban’s chair.”
The entire show with Smithmier can be listened to here or below. He further discusses Tennessee’s program dealing with looming NCAA sanctions, Heupel’s connections to Oklahoma and Utah and how his tenure with the Vols parallels Dennis Franhione’s at Alabama.
Nothing but respect from the former Alabama analyst!
Nick Saban’s coaching tree extends far and wide. Whether it be young future coaches starting out as assistants, or former head coaches of rival programs who need a fresh start, Saban welcomes all to his staff. One of his former analysts, Butch Jones, is an example of a former rival head coach at Tennessee, who joined Alabama to revitalize his coaching career.
During his time at Alabama, Jones worked with Mac Jones and saw what he was capable of.
Now, Butch is the head coach of Arkansas State.
Today, after the news broke of Mac becoming the starting quarterback for the New England Patriots, Butch was asked about his relationship with Mac.
He mentions that Mac is a strong and dedicated player that was willing to wait the three years to become the starting quarterback, and then made the most of the opportunity.
Butch Jones was hired as Arkansas State’s head coach on Dec. 12.
Butch Jones was hired as Arkansas State’s head coach on Dec. 12.
Jones served in an off-field role at Alabama from 2018-20, working closely with head coach Nick Saban.
Prior to arriving at Alabama, Jones served as head coach at Tennessee. He compiled a 34-27 record from 2013-17 and was 3-0 in bowl games with the Vols.
Former Tennessee defensive lineman John Mincey is set to play for Jones at Arkansas State.