Athlon Spring Preview

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WA_Vol

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Tennessee Volunteers 2012 Spring Preview | AthlonSports.com

Offensive Strength: The passing game. Quarterback Tyler Bray and wideouts Da'Rick Rogers (maybe) and Justin Hunter form one of the most talented QB-WR combos in the nation. Toss in an elite recruiting class at wideout and tight end Mychal Rivera and the Vols boast one of the best passing attacks in the country.

Offensive Weakness: Everything else. The running game was seriously lacking last fall and will once again be an area of concern for the Big Orange faithful. Finding a feature back and linemen who can create holes will be the top priority for offensive coordinator Jim Chaney.

Defensive Strength: The secondary. At least, the depth and experience in the defensive backfield. Veteran Prentiss Waggner is on the move from safety to corner. The top ten DBs from a year ago return to Knoxville.

Defensive Weakness: The linebackers, and more specifically, the pass rush are a major concern. New coordinator Sal Sunseri will be installing a new 3-4 scheme and needs to find playmakers to fill the starting linebacker positions.

Spring Storylines Facing the Volunteers:

1. Dealing with the Dooley drama. Head coach Derek Dooley is squarely on the hot seat after two losing seasons in Knoxville. He dealt admirably with a massive coaching exodus (more on this in a moment) by rebuilding his staff with quality coaches. And for the first time in years, this program returns a deep, talented and experienced roster. The expectation to win has to weigh heavy on not just Dooley but every member of the Vols program. The circus surrounding his tenure isn't going to slow anytime soon, so the quicker he can answer questions the better his team will be.

2. Stabilizing and integrating seven new coaches into the program. With 19 starters back, it will be the coaching staff that needs to get acclimated, not the players. Chaney is still in place as the OC, but new running backs coach Jay Graham and offensive line coach Sam Pittman will have their hands full trying to restablish the dormant Big Orange rushing attack. There is plenty of talent to work with on that side of the ball, however, and the quarterback position is stable. With the implementation of the new 3-4 scheme, it is the defensive coaching staff that has the most work to do this spring. New DC Sal Sunseri brings an extraodinary track record with him to Knoxville in terms of developing linebackers — something that could be the difference between a bowl game and sitting at home this winter (and an employment check for everyone). Additionally, Sunseri and defensive line coach John Palermo will need to develop a scheme that can somehow put pressure on opposing quarterbacks (Tennessee finished 11th in the SEC in sacks, 100th nationally).

3. All of the above issues would be helped with much-needed growth and maturity from team leaders like Bray. Dooley and Sunseri can lead the horse to water, but it is up to the horse to actually drink. Names like Bray need take it upon themselves to prove that they can make others around them better by leading by example. The Corey Millers (currently dealing with academic issues) and Jacques Smiths need to live up to the massive recruiting hype and develop into every down performers. The last two seasons featured so much youth and inexperience, that mental mistakes — both on and off the field — were almost expected. This will not be the case in 2012 and it should not just be the coaching staff holding the team accountable — it needs to be the players. The star quarterback even admitted as much in his first media session of the spring, "Last year I wasn't the smartest guy. Kind of dumb. This year I'm trying to get my act together and trying to get this team where it needs to be."

4. Settling on a linebacker rotation and getting pressure on the quarterback is the top priority for Sunseri and Palmero. Smith seems to possess a perfect skillset for the Jack Back position, but will be pushed by Willie Bohannon. Youngsters A.J. Johnson and Curt Maggitt had quality first seasons, but have to adjust to the new scheme. Maggitt might be one of the biggest hitters in the SEC and is apparently loving his shift inside to the Mike position. His recognition skills now need to catch-up with his physical ability. He will be pushed by the contact-craved Herman Lathers, who returns after sitting out an entire year from a severe ankle injury. Former strong safety Brent Brewer, who tore his ACL in November, is gaining weight in order to play backer and also feels more comfortable because of it. Former fullback Channing Fugate might be making the biggest adjustment after being shifted to weakside linebacker. This was a thin position coming into spring and the shift to a 3-4 only puts added pressure on the depth chart. There are some nice pieces to this puzzle but Sunseri must implement a new system with players at new positions without wearing out his first stringers.

5. Helping the backers will be the new three-man front line. Maurice Couch needs to play the way he appears to be capable of more consistently on the interior. He has the ability to stabilize the front and allow for names like Miller, Marlon Walls and Daniel Hood to develop. Organizing this group will go a long way in helping to stabilize the totally reworked linebacker rotation. Junior college transfer — and former Crimson Tider in his own right — Darrington Sentimore might be the most intriguing new piece to the puzzle to watch this spring.

6. Dooley wants a feature back. There is only one issue - he may not have one on the roster. Marlin Lane is the leading returning rusher and might be the most talented, but is generously listed at 6-0, 205 pounds. He will most certainly split time with more physical Raijon Neal. Look also for diminutive sophomore Devrin Young (5-8, 171) to also get plenty of chances as well. Graham and Dooley know that 90.1 yards per game — where the Vols finished 2011, good for 12th in the SEC — is completely unacceptable in Knoxville. With another year of growth, an offensive line that has collectively become an upperclass unit together must develop into a strength for this team.
 
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#2
#2
I wish everyone would give the "maybe" a rest wih Rogers. He will be good to go this season. These people are no more informed than we are
 
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#4
#4
Athlon seems to have just taken some hack in the mailroom to write this junk. R. Neal more physical than Lane? Seriously? The staff at Athlon clearly hasn't watched a down of Tenn football in 3 years.

And no playmakers at LB?? Hello, AJ?
 
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#5
#5
Athlon seems to have just taken some hack in the mailroom to write this junk. R. Neal more physical than Lane? Seriously? The staff at Athlon clearly hasn't watched a down of Tenn football in 3 years.

And no playmakers at LB?? Hello, AJ?

I think the linebacker comments were referring to changing from a 4-3 to a 3-4. I thought UT was going with multiple defense formation but this article seemed to focus on the 3-4.
 
#7
#7
Fairly decent assessment. No mention of mccullers or aj on defense. It always seems that these preseason writers hit around our problems but never nail them down. The one thing they did get right is about leaders needing to emerge. Maybe they will in fall camp.
 
#8
#8
I felt as thought the Linebackers were more of a strength this year then the secondary. Sure there is a major scheme change, but I think LB is probably the most talented position, top to bottom, on our defense.
 
#9
#9
I just hope our five-technique outside linebackers and our three-technique defensive line are better adept at applying pressure on opposing quarterbacks than they were last year. It's all well-and-good if you can bump man-to-man and play some zone coverage on receivers, but if you can't blitz effectively, not only do you wear your secondary out with the potential for a lot of underneath passes to slot receivers, you don't really have a chance at containing the run all the time.
 
#10
#10
I think the linebacker comments were referring to changing from a 4-3 to a 3-4. I thought UT was going with multiple defense formation but this article seemed to focus on the 3-4.

Pretty sure the coaches have said that it will be multiple.
 
#11
#11
I hate the 3-4. Unless you've got a really stack defensive line along with a solid linebacking corps, that alignment allows for a lot of rushing yards by the opponent. I've always preferred the 4-3 personally.

My all-time favorite defense, though, is the 46.
 
#12
#12
This review is practically worthless. Neal is called "physical"? Puhlease! I'm not down on the guy, but calling him "physical" is equivalent to saying there are concerns about his "speed". Also, the article refers to Maggit as one of the "biggest hitters in the SEC". What? Did he mean Johnson? I haven no idea what he is referring to. Who is talking about Maggit's vicious hits? I'm not saying the guys isn't a big hitter. I don't know. But to be one of the biggers hitters in the SEC, you'd think he has a reputation. He doesn't. Also, is Jordan Williams even mentioned in the battle for the Jack position? That's what I was reading during spring practice. The kid can play. If I can get that from reading articles on govols.com and rockytoptalk.com but they don't even mention it on the Athlon article, how reliable can this article be. Completely frustrating. I've been a total sucker for these articles in the past. I don't think they know crap about our team.

Go Vols!!!!
 
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#13
#13
I think, for once, Athlon's MLB prognosticators got it right about the New York Yankees: their pitching sucks. I know that doesn't mean anything as far as the discussion we're having here, but it goes to show what little faith I have like many of you don't have in those magazines. They're basically printed on those pages to piss people off, who will no doubt buy the magazine just so they can ***** and gripe about it.
 
#17
#17
I think the linebacker comments were referring to changing from a 4-3 to a 3-4. I thought UT was going with multiple defense formation but this article seemed to focus on the 3-4.

I think it's telling that they focused on the 3-4 but failed to mention Mccullers when talking about JUCO D-Line additions.
 
#18
#18
I felt as thought the Linebackers were more of a strength this year then the secondary. Sure there is a major scheme change, but I think LB is probably the most talented position, top to bottom, on our defense.

The problem with our LB corp is that the bottom is a little closer to the top than we'd like. We've got some quality, but our numbers are low (which is why we have so many people switching to LB from other positions).
 
#19
#19
The problem with our LB corp is that the bottom is a little closer to the top than we'd like. We've got some quality, but our numbers are low (which is why we have so many people switching to LB from other positions).

:lol: Wow, we're turning into Penn State! :lol:
 
#22
#22
I think it's telling that they focused on the 3-4 but failed to mention Mccullers when talking about JUCO D-Line additions.

Nobody (outside of UT fans)is talking about him.. Which is strange considering we beat out Bama for him, and we will be in such need for his services. I feel pretty good about him though.. Big juco DT's have done very well for bama, uga, and au lately. Big mac should have the hype those other guys had going into the season..Hopefully everybody knows about him this Fall though.
 
#23
#23
I hate the 3-4. Unless you've got a really stack defensive line along with a solid linebacking corps, that alignment allows for a lot of rushing yards by the opponent. I've always preferred the 4-3 personally.

My all-time favorite defense, though, is the 46.

U play too much Madden.
 
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#25
#25
Was a decent article.. writer seems to be off on a few things but not nearly as bad as everything else I have read so far.
 
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