BarnesIsCaliparisDaddy
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Pretty sure he missed more. He may have STARTED a couple games, but actually only played a couple snaps. He missed more than those stats would have you think. I believe Ole Miss was one he missed also.That's what the UT sports site showed, started 10 out of the 13 games. Missed Alabama, Vandy and Purdue.
If Heupel can’t knit those guys into a formidable unit, then he’ll never succeed at UT. Returning 4 talented and highly recruited upperclassmen starters, plus several players who have started games, and a quality transfer. I’d say Carvin and Wright are both capable of playing long careers in the NFL. I’m baffled by those who don’t expect great things from this unit this year.I have a feeling that the OL will struggle again especially protecting the QB. I thought maybe should have brought in another transfer or 2 for the OL. We’ll see.
Per UT sports he played in almost 500 of the 900+ offensive snaps last season. Played in 478 of the 660 offensive snaps in 2020. Definitely missed plenty of time but hardly played is much too harsh.Pretty sure he missed more. He may have STARTED a couple games, but actually only played a couple snaps. He missed more than those stats would have you think. I believe Ole Miss was one he missed also.
Tennessee’s defense, easy.
Tennessee’s offensive line was beat-up throughout the 2021 season, which didn’t allow the unit to completely gel. Four starters return, and there’s other experience, too. It’s certainly not a group that ranks in the top-half of the conference, but it should be serviceable in an offensive system designed to wear out defensive lines. The Vols should not allow the most sacks (44 last season) in the SEC again, partly because quarterback Hendon Hooker should be more comfortable in Josh Heupel’s system in Year 2 and won’t hold onto the ball as much.
Defensively, the answers aren’t so simple. The Vols’ defense was legitimately good at creating negative plays (program-record 102 tackles for loss, second-most in the SEC), but they hemorrhaged explosive plays almost as often (61 plays allowed over 20 yards, fourth-most in the league). They were also terrible on third downs and couldn’t get a stop on key passing downs. Tennessee should be better against the run in 2022, but it still enters the fall with continued questions in the secondary. The Vols’ defense will hold down the team’s overall ceiling until Tim Banks’ unit gets more talent.
#MeansMoreMailbag: Billy Napier strikes back, top playmaker in the SEC, concerns for Tennessee
Tennessee’s defense, easy.
Tennessee’s offensive line was beat-up throughout the 2021 season, which didn’t allow the unit to completely gel. Four starters return, and there’s other experience, too. It’s certainly not a group that ranks in the top-half of the conference, but it should be serviceable in an offensive system designed to wear out defensive lines. The Vols should not allow the most sacks (44 last season) in the SEC again, partly because quarterback Hendon Hooker should be more comfortable in Josh Heupel’s system in Year 2 and won’t hold onto the ball as much.
Defensively, the answers aren’t so simple. The Vols’ defense was legitimately good at creating negative plays (program-record 102 tackles for loss, second-most in the SEC), but they hemorrhaged explosive plays almost as often (61 plays allowed over 20 yards, fourth-most in the league). They were also terrible on third downs and couldn’t get a stop on key passing downs. Tennessee should be better against the run in 2022, but it still enters the fall with continued questions in the secondary. The Vols’ defense will hold down the team’s overall ceiling until Tim Banks’ unit gets more talent.
#MeansMoreMailbag: Billy Napier strikes back, top playmaker in the SEC, concerns for Tennessee
Tennessee’s defense, easy.
Tennessee’s offensive line was beat-up throughout the 2021 season, which didn’t allow the unit to completely gel. Four starters return, and there’s other experience, too. It’s certainly not a group that ranks in the top-half of the conference, but it should be serviceable in an offensive system designed to wear out defensive lines. The Vols should not allow the most sacks (44 last season) in the SEC again, partly because quarterback Hendon Hooker should be more comfortable in Josh Heupel’s system in Year 2 and won’t hold onto the ball as much.
Defensively, the answers aren’t so simple. The Vols’ defense was legitimately good at creating negative plays (program-record 102 tackles for loss, second-most in the SEC), but they hemorrhaged explosive plays almost as often (61 plays allowed over 20 yards, fourth-most in the league). They were also terrible on third downs and couldn’t get a stop on key passing downs. Tennessee should be better against the run in 2022, but it still enters the fall with continued questions in the secondary. The Vols’ defense will hold down the team’s overall ceiling until Tim Banks’ unit gets more talent.
#MeansMoreMailbag: Billy Napier strikes back, top playmaker in the SEC, concerns for Tennessee