Stan Trott details Vols’ 99-yard game winning drive at Florida in 1971

Former Tennessee wide receiver Stan Trott details catching the game winning touchdown on the Vols’ 99-yard drive at Florida in 1971.

Tennessee and Florida played six times in Gainesville before Southeastern Conference divisional play began in 1992.

Tennessee compiled a 5-16 record versus the Gators in Gainesville from 1953-2021.

The Vols won in Gainesville for a third time on Oct. 2, 1971.

The 1971 contest was tied, 13-13, at halftime. The game’s final points took place with 4:47 remaining in the third quarter, producing one of the most iconic drives in Tennessee’s history.

Florida’s John James punted the ball to the Tennessee one-yard line. Lenny Lucas downed the ball for the Gators at the one-yard line, while sliding into the end zone. Tennessee head coach Bill Battle argued the ruling on the field and the Vols received a penalty, placing the ball six inches closer to the goal line.

Tennessee went 99 yards on a game-winning touchdown drive to defeat the Gators, 20-13.

Wide receiver Stan Trott recorded Tennessee’s game-winning 20-yard touchdown reception from third-string quarterback Phil Pierce on the drive.

Trott discussed Tennessee’s win at Florida in 1971 with Vols Wire.

“We drove 99.5 yards for that score,” Trott said. “Coach Battle was an easy going guy. They had punted and Florida touched the ball and it was in the end zone. The refs spotted it on the half-yard line. Coach Battle came running down and I thought he was going to get kicked out. He was so mad because they spotted it on the half-yard line. It should have been a touchback. They say the drive was 99 yards, but we should get credit for that half-yard.

“Everything was in rhythm during the drive. Phil was a dual-threat quarterback and could run and throw. It was kind of a perfect situation between running options and throwing a pass or two. We just kept moving. It was one play after another, four or five yards. First down, another four or five yards. We got down to the 20-yard line and it was a pass play, but it was going to be more of a hook play. As I went out, they were aware of me from the previous year, so they were covering me pretty good. Phil was sprinting out and threw a perfect pass to me. At the time, we didn’t know that was the game winner because it was in the third quarter, but we had a great defense.”

Joe Rudis/USA TODAY Network

The 1971 matchup featured two second-year head coaches in Battle and Florida’s Doug Dickey.

Dickey served as the Vols’ head coach from 1964-69. Battle was Tennessee’s assistant ends coach under Dickey from 1966-69.

Dickey left Tennessee for Florida after the Vols’, 14-13, loss to the Gators on Dec. 27, 1969. The contest took place in the Gator Bowl.

Battle was elevated as head coach after Dickey’s departure.

“Everybody on Tennessee’s 1971 team was recruited by coach Dickey,” Trott said. “In 1970 against Florida, Dickey came back and we beat them. The next year we were going to Gainesville, and again it was coach Dickey. They were fired up and it was a night game, and it was hot.

“The Florida games were big back then, especially for the 1970 and 1971 games when coach Dickey was playing us for the first time home and away. Coach Dickey going to Florida made the first two games especially big just for that reason. 1971 was a big game and a great game. It was probably one of the biggest drives in Tennessee history, going the length of the field.”

The Knoxville News-Sentinel, Sept. 5, 1971

PHOTOS: Tennessee football head coaches through the years

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.

How the last 10 first-year Florida football head coaches performed

Take a look at the history Billy Napier is up against next season.

The departure of Dan Mullen from Florida football in 2021 marked the end of the tenth head coaching tenure in Gainesville since 1960. Now, former Louisiana Ragin’ Cajuns skipper Billy Napier has taken the helm of the Gators facing an uphill battle in his debut campaign as the team looks to move on from the debacle of this past season.

Over the years, the turnover on the sideline has happened for a myriad of reasons, from simple retirement to embarrassing scandals that rocked the entire athletic program. Each time the head coach was replaced, the newcomer faced a slew of various challenges with some benefitting from the previous regime’s roster more than others.

Below is a breakdown of how the last 10 first-year head coaches fared after taking the reins of the team dating back over 60 years. Some of the names included ring immortal in the hallowed halls of the Swamp while others are ones the Gator Nation would prefer to forget. Here is a look at the history Napier and his staff are up against in 2022.

Note: All rankings are via AP Poll and records courtesy of Sports Reference.

Vols’ football history 1964-1969: Head coach Doug Dickey

Vols’ football history 1964-1969: Head coach Doug Dickey

KNOXVILLE — University of Tennessee football is rich in tradition and Vols Wire will explore the program by examining each head coach’s tenure.

This installment will focus on Doug Dickey’s time as head coach of the Big Orange.

He took the reins of the football program in 1964 and remained in Knoxville until 1969.

Dickey is a native of South Dakota, but he was raised in Florida. He was a quarterback and defensive back for the Gators from 1951-53. As a player, he led Florida to a victory over Tulsa in the 1953 Gator Bowl.

He is a member of the Gator Bowl Hall of Fame as he coached both the Volunteers and Florida in the postseason tilt.

Dickey is also a member of the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame, the College Football Hall of Fame, the Greater Knoxville Sports Hall of Fame and the University of Florida Athletic Hall of Fame.

He began his coaching career as an assistant at Arkansas under the legendary Frank Broyles. Dickey was in Fayetteville from 1957-63.

He then came to Knoxville, where he led Tennessee to a pair of Southeastern Conference championships in 1967 and 1969, and the 1967 national championship.

Dickey was a two-time SEC Coach of the Year in 1967 and 1969. At UT, he had a coaching record of 46-14-4. His overall career mark is 104-58-6 and was 2-7 in bowl games throughout his career as a head coach.

Dickey left Tennessee following its 14-13 loss to Florida in the 1969 Gator Bowl to become head coach at Florida, where he stayed from 1970-78.

In 1979, he was the offensive coordinator at Colorado.

He returned to Rocky Top to become Tennessee’s athletic director in 1985 and retired from that post in 2002.