2020 AFCA Convention recap

2020 AFCA Convention.

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NASHVILLE – The American Football Coaches Association’s annual convention took place Jan. 12-14 at Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center in Nashville, Tenn.

Many coaches from across the nation and the world were present. Vols Wire was in attendance and discussed a wide range of topics with various coaches from career achievements, what lies ahead and talking concepts that included the Air Raid mesh with Arizona head coach Kevin Sumlin.

The event kicked off with Minnesota head coach P.J. Fleck discussing his career and how he has risen from a junior wide receiver at Northern Illinois attending the AFCA Convention and knowing he wanted to coach. He has since climbed the coaching ranks, becoming a first-time head coach at Western Michigan (2013-15). There, his ability to build a program with its culture on display was at the forefront and he has since moved on to rebuild Minnesota’s program in the same capacity.

Fleck’s full speech can be listened to below.

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Current and former University of Tennessee coaches were present at the annual event. UT Director of Athletics Phillip Fulmer also made his presence.

The likes of former Tennessee assistant and current Duke head coach David Cutcliffe discussed his time at UT coaching under Johnny Majors and Phillip Fulmer.

“Coach Majors was the most organized practice guys,” Cutcliffe said.

The Duke head coach mentioned Majors made it a point for assistants to write down any mistakes they made and learn from it.

“The big thing with Phillip (Fulmer) was perseverance,” Cutcliffe continued regarding the pair of former UT head coaches. “He was the most consistent, perseverian person that I have ever been around.”

Cutlciffe also discussed with Vols Wire his openness to changing coaching tactics as the game does with rules, the transfer portal and other items such as offenses changing.

“I have learned more in the last five years than I have in the previous 15,” he said. “We all have to be prepared to do that in our line of work.”

David Johnson
Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

Recently departed Tennessee running backs coach David Johnson was also present at the AFCA Convention representing his new school, Florida State. Johnson discussed the amount of hard work he gave to Tennessee over the last two years with Vols Wire, simply saying that he worked hard during his time on Rocky Top.

Other coaches present at the Convention discussed UT’s coaching staff vacancy with Vols Wire. The common theme was that Jeremy Pruitt will take his time to fill the opening Johnson has left behind, much like he did when hiring offensive coordinator Jim Chaney last offseason. Johnson left UT on Jan. 4.

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Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

Former Tennessee head coach Butch Jones also took part in the 2020 AFCA Convention on its second day. Jones, who finished his second season as an analyst at Alabama in 2019, mentioned to Vols Wire that he eventually plans on getting back into a head coaching position again and is enjoying his time under Nick Saban.

One coach told Vols Wire that Jones will enhance what went well during his Tennessee tenure and will fix what could have been better when he becomes a head coach again.

Bob Shoop
Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

Former Tennessee defensive graduate assistant Jon Shalala arrived at UT during the summer of 2016 under Jones and defensive coordinator Bob Shoop. Shoop went to Mississippi State in the same capacity for the 2018-19 seasons.

Shalala remained at Tennessee throughout Pruitt’s first season as head coach in 2018. He then followed Shoop to Mississippi State and served as an assistant to inside linebackers throughout the 2019 season.

Mississippi State fired head coach Joe Moorhead following the Bulldogs’ bowl game and have since hired Mike Leach for his replacement. Shalala has experience handling transition when Tennessee went from Jones to Pruitt following the 2017 season. He remains currently within Mississippi State’s program under Leach and told Vols Wire that everything has been good so far during the transition.

Shalala filled in for linebackers coach Chris Marve during the Music City Bowl against Louisville. Marve left Mississippi State to join Mike Norvell’s Florida State coaching staff.

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Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

University of Tennessee at Martin running backs coach Sean Fisher was selected to the AFCA 2020 35 Under 35 Coaches Leadership Institute. Fisher previously discussed his coaching career on the show “Tennessee Two-A-Days” with newly hired USA Academy head coach Rush Propst. The interview can be listened to below.

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Phillip Fulmer discusses Tennessee’s process of accepting Gator Bowl invite

2020 Gator Bowl: Tennessee-Indiana

KNOXVILLE — Tennessee will conclude the 2019 season with a matchup against Indiana in the TaxSlayer Gator Bowl.

Kickoff is slated for 7 p.m. ET on Jan. 2 at EverBank Field in Jacksonville, Fla.

Following the announcement of the Tennessee-Indiana matchup, UT’s Director of Athletics Phillip Fulmer discussed the Vols playing in the Gator Bowl and how close they were in heading to the Music City Bowl.

“Nashville would have been a fantastic destination,” Fulmer said. “It is a great venue, a great place and in-state. The conference commissioner, in the end, makes the decision to ask for our preferences and we went back and forth a couple of times of what was best, and at the end I think we landed in the right place for this football team for this particular time.”

Fulmer also mentioned that the Gator Bowl is getting “the hottest team” as the Vols have won five consecutive contests.

“It played out very well,” Fulmer said. “There’s a process in place, starting with the College Football Playoff, things kind of fell where they did and being in the group that we were in, I think the Gator Bowl got the hottest team right now.”

Music City Bowl’s Scott Ramsey discusses Vols’ chances of playing in Nashville

2019 Tennessee football.

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NASHVILLE — Tennessee (7-5, 5-3 SEC) finished the 2019 regular season with five consecutive wins.

The five-game win-streak has provided momentum heading into the offseason under Jeremy Pruitt as he continues to rebuild the Vols’ program back to a championship contender.

Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl President and CEO Scott Ramsey discussed how Tennessee playing in Nashville for the postseason is a good fit.

“Obviously we would be very excited to have them,” Ramsey told Vols Wire of Tennessee. “I think it would be a good fit.”

Ramsey mentioned that each year is different and having the Vols play at Nissan Stadium is a better fit this bowl season with Tennessee carrying momentum into 2020.

“I think every year is different,” Ramsey said. “In talking to the Tennessee folks and Phillip (Fulmer), sometimes when you are really close you want to make it the right year when you are there.

“I know some of our counterparts have similar situations, sometimes it seems like it’s the right year and sometimes it works best if you go in a different direction, but this one certainly feels that if we have the opportunity then it will be really successful. Tennessee specifically, they did not play at Vanderbilt this year and no bowl game last year, so we feel like with a Monday afternoon game and a chance to really reach out and maximize the opportunity to the fans to participate in the program and the players to play in front of a full stadium, we think we have the right opportunity.”

Ramsey said that he and counterparts representing other bowl games have to wait and see how championship games play out before Sunday’s final College Football Rankings.

“I say that with a little bit of a pumping the brakes because we have to see how the system plays out and some things we can’t control and how many teams the SEC ultimately gets in the New Year’s Six — which could dictate the available teams in our pool and shuffle all of the cards,” Ramsey said of Tennessee playing in the Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl. “We have been fortunate in Nashville, given the geographical proximity to most of the schools within at least a half-day drive, our flexibility with some teams are really good and we have seen some really great response.

“Our city is an exciting place for the players and fans. If we are fortunate enough to have Tennessee it will be a great, successful fit this year.”

Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl selection process

  • Agreement with the SEC to take on either the ACC or Big Ten (through a unique partnership with the TaxSlayer Bowl) each year.
  • Equally positioned with five other Bowl games (Outback, TaxSlayer, Advocare Texas, Belk, and Autozone Liberty) immediately following the College Football Playoff and Capital One Bowl.
  • The SEC office controls selection of SEC schools with input from both the Bowls and Universities within the above-mentioned six Bowl group.
  • Over the course of six years, the SEC will play an ACC team three times and a Big Ten team three times.
  • The Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl and TaxSlayer Bowl will jointly determine which Conference (ACC or Big 10) will play in each Bowl on “Selection Sunday.” The rotation is not pre-determined giving the Bowls maximum flexibility in creating the best match-ups for their respective SEC opponent.

Ramsey discussed which conference could matchup against an SEC team this season in the Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl.

“We probably will go ACC this year,” he said. “Louisville, most logically, would be one of our options, Virginia Tech could fit in there as well. We will see how things play out and leads into Sunday.”

If Tennessee is not the team representing the SEC in Nashville, Ramsey views Mississippi State or Kentucky as “successful” options, as well.

As championship games unfold leading up to the final College Football Playoff rankings, Ramsey detailed what he will be watching for.

“What we are really watching are how many (SEC teams) are in the New Year’s Six,” Ramsey said. “It’s a dominio effect. We are all trying to make matchups work.

“We work more through the conferences for a better sense of all the matchups and not just two. So it might be a three or four bowl trickle like Tampa, Charlotte, Houston. Who you have on the other side of the game factors. We all do talk and we all share preferences, and ultimately now it centers with the conferences.”

Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl — December 30, 2019 — 3:00 p.m. CT

Phillip Fulmer responds to Jauan Jennings’ suspension

SEC suspends Jauan Jennings.

KNOXVILLE — The Southeastern Conference announced that Tennessee redshirt senior wide receiver Jauan Jennings has been suspended for the first half of the Vols’ bowl game.

The suspension stems from Jennings being involved in an altercation with an opposing player (against Vanderbilt) in which he committed a flagrant personal foul determined by a video review by the conference office.

Following the announcement, Tennessee Director of Athletics Phillip Fulmer responded to the SEC’s decision.

“Commissioner (Greg) Sankey shared his perspective on the actions in question, we had a long conversation about the matter, and we will honor the suspension,” Fulmer said in a statement released by the University of Tennessee. “Jauan has been nothing but outstanding for our team and program this entire season.”