I see the OP's post and raise it with a longer one.
1950 - Hank Lauricella - RushAtt/Yds= 122/575 - Pass Comp/Att/Yards = 23/72/364
1956 - Johnny Majors - RushAtt/Yds= 108/549 - Pass Comp/Att/Yds= 36/59/552
1965 - Dewey Warren gets on campus, has more rush attempts than pass attempts
1966 -
1967 - Behind Warren UT finished ranked 2nd and he passed for over 1000 yards again, while rushing 45 times for zero yards...just two years prior he ran more than he threw...That's the start of a TRANSFORMATION at the QB position at Tennessee.
1970 - The team finished the year ranked #4, the best year of the Battle era behind Bobby Scott who went 118/252/1697 passing and ran 51 times for 89 yards.
1972 - just two years later, Condredge Holloway takes over on the hill and he RUSHES 123 times for 266 yards and 3 scores while going 73/120 for 807 yards in the air. They finished 8th in the final AP. In fact CH would run the ball at least 100 times each year as a starter.
1979 - Jimmy Streater leads the team to a season high ranking of 17th, rushing 82 times for 377 while completing 80 of 161 passes for 1256 yards. The Vols finished out of the poll but it was the first time a Majors led team was ranked.
1980's - Became the age of the pocket passer, that's not to say that some of these guys weren't mobile at all, but they weren't carrying the team running the football...guys like Steve Alattore, Alan Cockrell, Tony Robinson, Darryl Dickey, Jeff Francis, Andy Kelly, Jerry Colquitt and Sterling Henton...
1992 - Heath Shuler is 2nd in rushing attempts on the squad, 105 Att/ 286 yards and a team high 11 rushing TD's...Charlie Garner, James Little Man Stewart and Aaron Hayden combined only had 10. The Vols finished 12 in the AP Poll.
1994 - Peyton Manning era begins...
1998 - National Championship Team, highest ranked team of the Fulmer era obviously...Tee Martin rushes 103 times for 287 yards and 7 TDs, the same number as Travis Henry. In '99 Martin rushed for 9 TDs, 2 more than Jamal Lewis and 1 more than Travis Henry.
Really we should define this era as the Cutcliffe era, all the way up until he leaves the 2nd time for Duke, because he was getting the QB's he liked for what he ran. DC joined the Vols in 1982, was the QB coach starting in 1990, OC from '93 to '98.
2000's - Clausen, Ainge, Crompton, Bray...none of these guys are particularly mobile
The point is this, some of the highest ranked teams in UT history, going back to 1950, have had QB's that could score with their feet. Obviously over the last 30 years we've had some great seasons with guys that did it all with their arms. In fact, I suppose this is why some younger folks view Dobbs as "redefining the QB position", because unless you are over 30, it's been a long time since you've seen anything but a statue back there... besides Shuler and Martin, and they aren't exactly the same kind of mobile as Dobbs, nor did they play in an offense like the one we have now which has a lot of designed QB runs.
SO...I have no qualms really with the OP, but rather than say Dobbs is redefining, I choose "getting back to our roots".
After all, from a formation stand point, if you took Neyland's single wing, split the ends, the wing and the TB, move the QB where the TB was, you'd have the 2x2or 3x1 sets with one back and the QB in the shotgun, just like Bajakian and er'body else runs today.