Josh Palmer details development using a JUGS machine

Senior wide receiver Josh Palmer met with media ahead of playing Florida.

Senior Josh Palmer has appeared in seven games for Tennessee (2-5, 2-5 SEC) this season.

The 6-foot-2, 210-pound wide receiver has recorded 22 receptions for 331 yards and four touchdowns. He has totaled 88 receptions, 1,370 yards and seven touchdowns in 44 career games since 2017 at Tennessee.

Ahead of Tennessee’s contest against No. 5 Florida (7-1, 7-1 SEC), Palmer met with media and discussed how he has practiced with the use of a JUGS machine for his development.

ATHENS, GEORGIA – OCTOBER 10: Josh Palmer #5 of the Tennessee Volunteers pulls in this touchdown reception against DJ Daniel #14 of the Georgia Bulldogs during the first half at Sanford Stadium on October 10, 2020 in Athens, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

Palmer mentioned he has two people, Will and Ben, that help him every day going through drills while using the Jugs machine.

“Will, will play defense and play harder than a normal defensive back could in the game, because the refs would call pass interference,” Palmer said. “That’s an everyday thing I’ve been doing for the past two years with these guys. They’ve helped me a lot in my development.

“I don’t really think it helps with footwork, but it helps with hand-eye coordination by working on the depth of certain routes. Then, I’ll work with the quarterbacks later so we can develop timing.”

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Tee Martin ‘excited’ about how Ramel Keyton, Josh Palmer are playing

Tee Martin ‘excited’ about how Ramel Keyton, Josh Palmer are playing.

KNOXVILLE — Tennessee’s wide receivers unit lost its top two players from last season in Marquez Callaway and Jauan Jennings.

The Vols, however, return play-makers within the wide receivers unit.

Sophomore Ramel Keyton and senior Josh Palmer have brought excitement to their position coach Tee Martin. During the Vols’ third week of fall training camp, Martin met with media to discuss the wide receiver duo as they prepare for the upcoming season that kicks off Sept. 26 at South Carolina.

“I’m so excited about how they’re playing,” Martin said of Keyton and Palmer on a Zoom call with reporters. “The retention from last year, you know you don’t have a spring and you really have an abbreviated and modified training camp, so there’s a lot of teaching that you would normally have as a receivers coach in training camp that we’re not able to do because they’re in school and you’re on the 20-hour rule, so the time is cut a little bit. You’re having to lean on their experience, and ultimately their intelligence.”

KNOXVILLE, TN – AUGUST 21, 2020 – Wide receiver Josh Palmer #5 of the Tennessee Volunteers during 2020 Fall Camp practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Andrew Ferguson/Tennessee Athletics

Martin mentioned the duo are “two of the most intelligent receivers that I’ve ever coached.”

“Both of them are having to be moved around,” Martin continued. “One thing about operating under COVID is week-to-week you can have a different lineup at any position. If someone is out because of tracing, because they may be positive, and injuries. So, the approach I took as a receiver coach was to teach every receiver every position, because you may line up a week playing a different position because of whatever reason.

“Ramel has shown the ability to do that. Josh has shown the ability to do that. Both of them are surehanded guys, both of them are great route runners, both of them play above the rim – those so called 50-50 balls that you put in the air. If you noticed last season, Josh made great catches down the stretch for us on those 50-50 catches where he played above the rim, outjumped a guy and pulled the ball in. Ramel, you saw him kind of emerge towards the bowl game, big catch in the red zone, jumping in the air and playing above the rim. Both of those guys can jump, they can run, they’re smart, and you’ll see them being used in a lot of different ways this season.”

KNOXVILLE, TN – SEPTEMBER 01, 2020 – Wide receiver Ramel Keyton #80 of the Tennessee Volunteers during 2020 Fall Camp practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Caleb Jones/Tennessee Athletics

Josh Palmer discusses Vols’ freshmen wide receivers ‘shooting on all cylinders’

Josh Palmer discusses Vols’ freshmen wide receivers shooting on all cylinders.

KNOXVILLE – Tennessee’s offense lost its two top wide receivers following the 2019 campaign.

Marquez Callaway and Jauan Jennings are now on NFL rosters, paving a way for other Vol receivers to step up and become an important part of Tennessee’s offense in 2020.

Despite losing Callaway and Jennings, Tennessee has a deep wide receiver unit filled with experience and talented youth.

KNOXVILLE, TN – AUGUST 21, 2020 – Wide receiver Josh Palmer #5 of the Tennessee Volunteers during 2020 Fall Camp practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Andrew Ferguson/Tennessee Athletics

Senior Josh Palmer discussed the unit during week No. 2 of fall training camp, saying freshmen wide receivers are “shooting on all cylinders.”

“The coaches did a great job recruiting this year, as they do every year,” Palmer said on a Zoom media call. “Like I said before, right now what we’re focusing on is competition and just knowing the playbook, the ins and outs of the playbook.

“I feel every freshman, from receiver to DB (defensive back) to running back to every single position, can come in and do something special for us this year.”

Tennessee’s roster features freshmen wide receivers in Dee Beckwith, Jimmy Calloway, Jalin Hyatt, Jimmy Holiday and Malachi Wideman.

Here’s a look at the SEC’s best receivers from each school and how they rank

This 3rd installment in our Gators Wire original series will attempt to rank the likely No. 1 wide receiver for every member school in fall.

After previously examining each Southeastern Conference program’s projected quarterback and lead tailback entering the 2020 season, this third installment in our Gators Wire original series will attempt to rank the likely No. 1 wide receiver for every member school this fall.

Featuring high-powered offenses throughout the league’s 14 teams, the conference had nine wideouts selected in the 2020 National Football League Draft, meaning there will be some big names to replace and opportunities for returning players to step into larger roles.

The Florida Gators had three receivers chosen in the draft, the most of any SEC program, with Van Jefferson coming off the board at No. 57 to the Los Angeles Rams, Freddie Swain at No. 214 to the Seattle Seahawks, and Tyrie Cleveland at No. 252 to the Denver Broncos, the fourth-to-last overall selection.

Three of the league’s wideouts went in the first-round, headed by Alabama Crimson Tide standout Henry Ruggs III to the Las Vegas Raiders at No. 12. His teammate, Jerry Jeudy, followed shortly behind, selected by the Broncos at No. 15, and Justin Jefferson of the LSU Tigers was plucked by the Minnesota Vikings at No. 22.

NEXT: No. 14 Josh Ali – Kentucky Wildcats

2020 UT football player card: Josh Palmer

2020 UT football player card: Josh Palmer

Josh Palmer, Wide receiver (No. 5)

Class: Senior

Height: 6-foot-2

Weight: 200 pounds

Hometown: Brampton, Ontario (Canada)

High School: St. Thomas Aquinas

Palmer has appeared in 37 games during his Tennessee career. He has totaled 66 receptions for 1,039 yards and three touchdowns to go along with eight rushing attempts for 37 yards and one touchdown.

Palmer is a member of the 2018-19 VOLeaders Academy Class.

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)

Josh Palmer by the numbers in 2019

Josh Palmer by the numbers in 2019.

KNOXVILLE — Josh Palmer enters his senior season at Tennessee in 2020.

Spring practices begin March 9 and will conclude April 18 with the annual Orange and White spring game at Neyland Stadium.

The 6-foot-2, 195-pound receiver recorded 34 receptions, 457 yards and one touchdown last season for the Vols.

Scroll through to view Palmer’s receiving statistics by the numbers in detail for Tennessee last season.

NEXT: Palmer’s receiving numbers each quarter in 2019

A way-too-early preview of Tennessee’s wide receivers in 2020

A way-too-early preview of Tennessee’s wide receivers in 2020.

KNOXVILLE — Wide receiver was a position of strength for Tennessee in 2020.

With two talented and experienced seniors in Marquez Callaway and Jauan Jennings, the Vols lost over 1,600 yards and 14 touchdowns of production from those two players alone.

Jennings was considered the heart and soul of Tennessee’s football team, as an unquestioned leader that evolved into one of the most exciting players to watch in the SEC with the ball in his hands.

Now, it’s a new era for Tennessee’s wideouts, and role players in 2019 will need to step up to become go-to options in 2020.

It begins with rising senior Josh Palmer, who is Tennessee’s lead returning receiver in 2020. Palmer showed flashes during his junior campaign, playing third-fiddle to Callaway and Jennings. The Canadian native reeled in 34 passes for 457 yards and 1 touchdown.

While no other receiver returns that has the numbers of Palmer, there is talented but unproven depth in wide receivers coach Tee Martin’s unit. Former four-star prospect Ramel Keyton only caught four passes in his freshman season, but two came in the Gator Bowl win over Indiana to total 60 yards. In fact, Tennessee was able to get a slight preview of what’s to come in the bowl game as Palmer and Keyton led the Vols in receiving. Palmer caught six passes for 68 yards.

Among some of the unknown quantities in Tennessee’s wide receivers room is a former defensive back in Deangelo Gibbs. Having never played wide receiver at the collegiate level, Gibbs initially went to Georgia as a highly-touted defensive back and transferred to Tennessee in the offseason before the 2019 campaign.

Gibbs had to sit out the season due to transfer ineligibility rules, but will be available as a wide receiver in 2020. Since taking over at Tennessee, Jeremy Pruitt has not been afraid to switch players from different positions, and it is clear he and his staff believe the 6-foot-1, 200-pound junior has the talent and ball skills to contribute to the Vols at wide receiver in 2020.

Even with the possible NFL talent Tennessee had in Callaway and Jennings in 2019, one thing this unit has missed is a player with pure, straight-line speed that can take the top off of SEC defenses.

Tennessee took a step to remedy that in early January, bringing in former USC wideout Velus Jones Jr. as a graduate transfer.

Jones was recruited by Tennessee out of high school, and played for Tee Martin when Martin was coaching wide receivers at USC. Although he did not consistently crack the wide receiver rotation in Southern Cal, Jones racked up nearly 2,000 kick return yards and will be certainly utilized in Knoxville as he plays out his final season of eligibility.

Speaking of speed, another player that excites Tennessee’s coaching staff is incoming four-star prospect Jalin Hyatt out of South Carolina. Hyatt helped his Dutch Fork High School team to a state championship in 2019, hauling in 66 passes for 1,361 yards and 26 touchdowns. Expect Hyatt to contribute for Tennessee in 2020, along with four-star Georgia prospect Jimmy Calloway, who joins Hyatt in the 2020 class as a versatile, athletic option.

Also returning for Tennessee in 2020 is Brandon Johnson, who redshirted his junior season for the Vols after only appearing in four games. Many forget Johnson led Tennessee in receiving during the Vols’ abysmal 2017 4-8 campaign under Butch Jones, catching 37 passes for 482 yards and one touchdown.

The Fort Lauderdale, Fla. native will return as an experienced key cog in the 2020 wide receiver rotation.

Finally, 6-foot-3, 211-pound wideout Cedric Tillman returns to Knoxville for his redshirt sophomore season and will compete for more reps after being buried under the depth chart in 2020.

Tennessee’s wide receivers will have a completely new look in Jeremy Pruitt’s third season. 2019 saw a top-heavy unit that had experienced, big bodies who could high-point the football and shed tacklers. In 2020, the Vols appear to have a deeper, albeit inexperienced rotation with more contributors and pure speed.

It will be interesting to see how offensive coordinator Jim Chaney tinkers with this new crop of players, but the primary question is not who will catch the most passes for Tennessee in 2020, but who will be throwing the ball?

As the Vols prepare for spring football, figuring out this team’s starting quarterback will have a direct impact on the success of the wide receiver position.

It will not be a question of talent for Tennessee’s wide receivers in 2020. This group will need to gain experience and find out a true number one option to replace the outgoing Callaway and Jennings.