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Daniel Bituli identifies turning point for Tennessee's defense
By WES RUCKER
Daniel Bituli identifies turning point for Tennessee's defense
By WES RUCKER
Daniel Bituli identifies turning point for Tennessee's defense
The Vols’ leading tackler from each of the past three seasons said his defense’s performance against Mississippi State was a major tipping point that showed them how good they could be if they simply did exactly what they were coached to do.
Bituli didn’t flinch when asked if there was a single moment that turned Tennessee’s season.
“Yes, sir,” he instantly replied. “We had a lot of little sparks during the season, but after going against a really great running back in the Mississippi State game, we realized that if we communicated as much as possible on the field, if we really knew what we were gonna do, if we read our keys correctly, that the world is ours and we can stop anybody. Definitely that game showed that we could do it for a whole game.”
Mississippi State senior Kylin Hill is the SEC’s leading rusher, and he’s made some SEC defenses look bad this season. Tennessee completely stifled Hill, though, holding him to 13 yards on 11 carries in the Vols’ 20-10 win at Neyland Stadium.
Bituli said there are still “a lot of things” the Vols need to do better on the defensive side of the ball, but he also said recent improvements have “completely” changed their mindset and level of confidence.
The 6-foot-3, 252-pound native of the Congo also said second-year Tennessee head coach Jeremy Pruitt and his staff have been the primary culprits for the positive changes on that end.
“Since the time they got here, how can you not buy into a coaching staff that’s so established?” Bituli said. “You can just look at Coach Pruitt’s record, the players that he’s coached and the players that are doing so well in The League right now. To bring a coach like that into this facility, to help us out, help us become a better defense, better players as a whole, … I mean, I’m definitely a sponge when it comes to Coach Pruitt. He definitely knows what he’s talking about.”
The returns of Bituli and star sophomore cornerback Bryce Thompson also have played a huge role — both missed the season’s first two games, losses to Georgia State and BYU — but Bituli deflected any credit for that, saying all he and his teammates have done is finally embrace the things Pruitt and his staff have preached from Day One.
“Just watching film, we’re moving as a unit out there,” Bituli said. “We all understand what we’re gonna do on a given play and just communicating as much as possible, and not wondering what somebody else is gonna do on that play. It’s just communication that we’re doing and the extra film work that we’re doing. … We know the more we put into football, the more we’re gonna get out of it. It’s because of those guys that are working so hard, putting in that extra time to understand the defense or the offense we’re going up against.
“It’s been emphasized by the coaches since the time they got here,” he said of the extra work and extra film study. “It’s just a lot of guys are now finally taking ownership, realizing that by doing this extra work, it’s really gonna help us out in the long run. We now realize that. We all realize that.
“That’s why we’re having the success that we’re having right now.”