Now we know why Ainge........

#1

goodolerockytop2

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#1
dumped the ball off on 3rd an 15.......courage yes, hurt his team hell yeah.......

Tennessee quarterback Erik Ainge had to fight through pain to start the season opener against Cal. Then, he had to fight again just to stay in the game.

The senior was nearly pulled from last Saturday’s 45-31 loss to Cal after taking a hard hit on the sideline in the fourth quarter, offensive coordinator David Cutcliffe said on Tuesday.

“My intention was to take him out,” Cutcliffe said, “then he waved us off.”

In retrospect, Cutcliffe said he should have taken Ainge out for sophomore Jonathan Crompton.

When Ainge rolled out near the sideline, he took a staggering hit.

Cutcliffe said it was a “dumb hit” because Ainge should have thrown the ball away. Ainge banged up his shoulder and his broken right pinky finger on his throwing hand. It was the same finger that caused a stir leading up to preparations for the game.

On the next play, Cutcliffe called a downfield pass. Instead of following the directive, Ainge dumped the ball off into the flat. Cutcliffe knew right away that Ainge was hurting. On the next play, UT was forced to punt.

Ainge said tests revealed no further damage to the pinkie. Ainge participated, albeit cautiously, in Tuesday’s practice.

Cutcliffe certainly didn’t begrudge Ainge for wanting to stay in the game.

“The right kind aren’t going to back off,” Cutcliffe said. “They’re going to try to go out there with one arm cut off.”

Ainge said he would have remained on the bench had UT’s offense been immediately called to the field. Instead, Ainge had the five or 10 minutes he needed to allow the pain to pass.

Ainge said the key to avoiding pain in his pinkie is to be fundamentally sound.

“If my feet are set and I’m throwing the ball, then I couldn’t even tell that anything is wrong with me,” he said.

However, that piece of advice won’t help Ainge on the run when he can’t set his feet to throw.

Ainge said he readjusted his hands to accept snaps from the center, in order to have the ball make contact with the region of his palm closest to the ring and middle finger, not the pinkie.

Ainge said he was a bit overly conscious of the injury early in the game, which caused him to throw off balance.

Ainge chose not to comment when asked if he was receiving any pain injections to numb the finger. He also said he needed some practice this week for Saturday’s game against Southern Miss, but didn’t specify how much.

“I need to practice,’ Ainge said. “I could just go play, but that’s not ideal.”

Cutcliffe said Ainge’s injury has certainly affected his play calling.

“I had to think a little bit more,” Cutcliffe said. “I had about ten notes in front of me that I kept to remember.”

Encouraged by his finger’s progress, Ainge said, “It doesn’t feel any worse.”

Said Cutcliffe, “He looks much better than he did when he just freshly did it last week (on Monday).”

Cut Cuts: Cutcliffe said the most disappointing aspect of the Cal game was how the Vols finished the game.

“If we do something special, we might win the game,” he said. “We didn’t do anything special.”

Cutcliffe also said UT planned to control the ball, keeping it away from Cal’s explosive offense. That might have worked, had UT been able to convert on key third downs.

“It blew up in our face,” Cutcliffe said. “Had we played well offensively, we could have scored a lot of points.”

UT scored 31, but Cutcliffe said the total could have been much higher.

“I don’t think they’ll be one of the best defenses we play and that’s no disrespect to Cal,” he said.

Too Fast: Ryan Karl had a theory as to why the Vols missed several tackles on Saturday against Cal.

“We were just flying around too fast, out of control and missing tackles,” the senior linebacker said. “It’s not just a physical game. You can’t just be fast and not have the mental part to it. You have to know when to breakdown and when you can make that big hit.”

The concept of being too fast didn’t seem like that should be a problem for UT’s defense, which is predicated on speed.

“You want to be a fast defense,” Karl said. “You can still fly around but at the point of contact, you have to be under control. I just think a lot of times, we weren’t under control.”

Asking Ainge: Ainge said he expected UT’s defensive tackling to improve greatly this week. Part of the missed tackles, Ainge said, had to do with Cal as much as UT.

“We have a lot of good players on our team but we have different kinds of players,” he said. “We don’t have a guy like (Cal receiver) DeSean Jackson, who’s hopping left and right and left and right and making guys miss.”

Injury Report: Senior Xavier Mitchell only ran on the sidelines as he overcomes a concussion suffered against Cal. Mitchell was not wearing shoulder pads and is being evaluated daily to determine if he can play Saturday.

Freshman defensive end Ben Martin ran alongside Mitchell as he rehabilitates a bone bruise in his left knee he suffered in UT’s final preseason scrimmage on Aug. 18. Martin was only expected to miss two to four weeks meaning he could return later this month.

Junior punter Britton Colquitt did not practice. Colquitt and Fulmer spent the afternoon working with backup freshman punter Chad Cunningham.

Hill’s Climb: Ryan Hill, a lifelong UT fan from Kingston High School, recalled what went through his mind as he was inserted into the Cal game.

“I can’t believe it’s finally here,” Hill said.

Hill, a walk-on junior, played three plays in UT’s goal line package.
 
#2
#2
That makes me mad.......it is selfish to play hurt and take away from ur team......he had courage and ballz but it cost us in the long run.......
 
#4
#4
Hill’s Climb: Ryan Hill, a lifelong UT fan from Kingston High School, recalled what went through his mind as he was inserted into the Cal game.

“I can’t believe it’s finally here,” Hill said.

Hill, a walk-on junior, played three plays in UT’s goal line package.

:dunno:
 
#5
#5
Great......now his shoulder is in question.

He toughed it out, I'll give him that, but Ainge getting banged up is like death and taxes anymore.
 
#7
#7
Great......now his shoulder is in question.

He toughed it out, I'll give him that, but Ainge getting banged up is like death and taxes anymore.

Yep, I truly thought that he would have a healthy year, but along came a pinky before the season even started.
 
#8
#8
I wondered if this was the case. That was a really hard hit and fall that he took.
 
#9
#9
Does anyone else think it to be a bit strange to have a walk on playing in 3 goal line plays? I'm all for giving kids chances to see the field, but couldn't that wait until we're blowing a team out?
 
#10
#10
He can't help it but dang. How many more times is he going to get hurt. He's had 5 bad injuries why he's been at UT. His draft will plummet if he keeps this up
 
#11
#11
Does anyone else think it to be a bit strange to have a walk on playing in 3 goal line plays? I'm all for giving kids chances to see the field, but couldn't that wait until we're blowing a team out?

shows the depth..or lack of.
 
#13
#13
Does anyone else think it to be a bit strange to have a walk on playing in 3 goal line plays? I'm all for giving kids chances to see the field, but couldn't that wait until we're blowing a team out?

I second that. Maybe Phil-bert was trying to make a point.
 
#15
#15
Which this adds to my theory which is turning into gospel that Ainge is just naturally fragile. We had a huge discussion about this when it came out that his finger was broke.

Before I get the ole, "Go cheer for Alabama crowd", Ainge is fragile, I'm not questioning his toughness.
 
#16
#16
Unless Cut can explain these two things:

1. Why Lucas Taylor was running the ball from the three yard line
2. Why we were throwing the ball from the three yard line

I am not particularly interested in what he has to say.
 
#17
#17
Unless Cut can explain these two things:

1. Why Lucas Taylor was running the ball from the three yard line
2. Why we were throwing the ball from the three yard line

I am not particularly interested in what he has to say.

I'm sure he thought he was being sneaky.
 
#18
#18
Thinking that Tedford would perhaps "Underestimate his sneakiness".
 
#21
#21
That makes me mad.......it is selfish to play hurt and take away from ur team......he had courage and ballz but it cost us in the long run.......

It's selfish to give your all for the team? No disrespect to Crompton, but do you really think he could have got us a 1st down on 3rd and 15, especially on his first play of the game?
 
#23
#23
I understand that point. If they were running the offense from the 50 yard line, I might agree, but I fail to see, nor could I ever see anything smart about lining a receiver in a goalline formation when you have an all american center and a 230 pound back with a rather hot hand.
 
#24
#24
Still......it's Cut's responsibility to check his team and make decisions on whether a player is healthy and should stay in the game......but I think Ainge has a responsibility to his team to have the best 11 out there at anytime......he shoulda tapped his helmet
 
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