David Ubben
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Today at The Athletic, a story on the day Tennessee won its way into the national championship game.
“I wish I had it to do over again,” Fulmer said. “I’d have planned to have two, three, four days afterward to celebrate and enjoy if you win or recover if you didn’t win.
“I was trying to make the point that this wasn’t the only time we’re gonna do this. So I had everybody back on an airplane the next day, going recruiting. We don’t have time to waste. Dumb. Really, really dumb. I’d have done something at my house, just the coaches and families and probably something at my house with a bunch of key donors and something with the players. I’d like to have three days, you know. Maybe in reverse order, because the players were the ones that did it. That was a really additional validation of where we were as a program. Even though we had lost one of the greatest players in the country and one of the greatest players ever at Tennessee, Peyton Manning, that team had proven they could do it on their own. That was great.”
Dec. 5, 1998 was an unbelievable day in Tennessee history, but it changed college football forever, too. Here's the full story of an unforgettable day, with more than a dozen interviews with the people who lived through it and videos of the day's most crucial moments.
“I wish I had it to do over again,” Fulmer said. “I’d have planned to have two, three, four days afterward to celebrate and enjoy if you win or recover if you didn’t win.
“I was trying to make the point that this wasn’t the only time we’re gonna do this. So I had everybody back on an airplane the next day, going recruiting. We don’t have time to waste. Dumb. Really, really dumb. I’d have done something at my house, just the coaches and families and probably something at my house with a bunch of key donors and something with the players. I’d like to have three days, you know. Maybe in reverse order, because the players were the ones that did it. That was a really additional validation of where we were as a program. Even though we had lost one of the greatest players in the country and one of the greatest players ever at Tennessee, Peyton Manning, that team had proven they could do it on their own. That was great.”
Dec. 5, 1998 was an unbelievable day in Tennessee history, but it changed college football forever, too. Here's the full story of an unforgettable day, with more than a dozen interviews with the people who lived through it and videos of the day's most crucial moments.
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